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Health and safety and the Emergency services
Should emergency services be subject to the same restrictions as the general public ?
This question has been raised by Sir Paul Stephenson as a result of the 7/7 inquiry Quote:
In my opinion no it doesn't sky link BBC link |
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Within reasonable limits it should be an understood part of the job. You're not filing clerks. |
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In reality the person was already under water and out of site on arrival of the PCSOs and as there was no reliable information where he was last seen they didn't go in, quite rightly IMO. |
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Sounds like it was all over by the time the PCSOs arrived. |
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I think this http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle2512401.ece is what i was thinking of, very sad.:confused: |
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A grandfather died of a heart attack while an emergency paramedic stood outside his home for 16 minutes, making a risk assessment. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle6652450.ece |
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Speaking as someone who has actually saved / rescued someone from drowning I can tell you, categorically, that I would think - long and hard - before doing it again. In fact I'm pretty sure that I could, with clear conscience, happlily live (that being the operative word) with myself were I not to do anything and leave it to those who are charged with that responsibility to do so. Don't get me wrong - it's not that I would be concerned with - as you so glibly put it in juvenile terms - "catching a cold" or "splinters" but rather more important things like risking my life and the very real potential that my wife and (now three) children might, through no fault of theirs, be left fatherless. I appreciate that may be a hard concept for you and others to grasp. |
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In the case of the 7/7 bombings one dog handler has hit out at other officers for holding back Quote:
Now without any figures to hand i think the cases of people dying because ES personnel where doing a "risk assessment" is very low and the number of ES personnel dying in the course of their duties is also very low ,so i am inclined to think that the balance between going into a situation all"gung ho" and going in ,in a calm considered manner is just about right . |
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I think they should yes and i also think that if Paramedics know there is a possibility of violence then police should be sent with them.
There is a known problematic street up the road from where i live where gangs and druggies deal in a lane behind the street where there is no street lighting and just garages and the druggies dial 999 and request ambulances and they jump the paramedics for the drugs in the back of the ambulance and as the law stands Paramedics HAVE to answer the calls. |
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