Spider Bite Patient dies of Helicopter Crash
KMATTOX at aol.com
KMATTOX at aol.com
Wed Jul 2 03:03:40 BST 2008
I have learned that one of the recent deaths in Flagstaff Arizona was a
DOUBLE IATROGENIC DEATH.
One of the helicopters was carrying a patient that had developed an
anaphalactoid reaction after receiving ANTIVENIN for a spider bite. There is
virtually NO spider in North America which requires spider antivenin. So, this
patient could have stayed where they were with NO spider antivenin (assuming
all things are as stated earlier). Then because this patient was in the
helicopter, it crashed into another helicopter. This was obviously NOT a
wilderness rescue, it was an inter hospital transfer, most of which can be most
expediciously accomplished in North America by Ground Ambulance. OR NO
TRANSPORT AT ALL WOULD HAVE BEEN REQUIRED. This is the kind of case where a
regional person could give advice to the sending doctor or nurse to treat the
patient at the origonal site. (Telemedicine)
k
In a message dated 7/1/2008 8:48:23 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
donn at phudpucker.com writes:
You're correct, of course, but consider that medical directors are employees
too - or contractors - and just like the medic who refuses, when an MD runs
contrary to profitable business practices......
Voices on other discussion groups posit regulation as the only hope. Not
sure I disagree.
Donn
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