You need to remember the main procedures of a paramedic if I was a paramedic I would put the C collar on first then put the person on the back board, place the person on the stretcher,go into the ambulance finally take the person to the hospital for treatment.
In this fictional depiction, the patient was ambulatory and showed no indications of spinal injury. Their chief complaint was trauma to the head. They assessed the patient's level of alertness & pupil reaction, and proceeded to treat the gash.
You're probably the one who's incompetent so therefore your judgement is totally incompetent. I believe You don't even know how to check if a person is still alive probably would start CPR on decapitated Patients.....
How is it legal that they can respond in private vehicles with red & blue lights with a siren no less? Especially when they are volunteering… Volunteer firefighters / emts by me out on Long Island don’t have all of those amenities unless they are a chief .. Must be nice to break the law and get away with it
1-Your assuming that all the hundreds of Volunteers are breaking the law. 2- Every Volunteer is registered, legally allowed to have Lights and sirens. 3-Stop bassing your curropt logic, just because certain ppl cant, get your facts first.
Every volunteer has the correct equipment in their vehicle and is inspected annually by the department of health to be able to respond with lights and sirens as an ambulance
Hold on Long Island is in NY and Linden (which is where this agency is based out of) is in NJ with two very different set of laws regarding the use of lights and sirens in POVs. In NY Red lights (and Sirens) are reserved for authorized emergency vehicles, Blue light is reserved for Volunteer fighters and Green light is reserved for Volunteer EMTs, both Blue and Green permits are issued by the hiring agency, Red light permits however need to be issued by some government body in the case of EMS it's the DOH and DOH put out a list that it requires to authorize "fly cars" with red lights called Part 800.26b and Hatzalah makes all of their members meet those requirements and get inspected by the DOH to receive a red light permit. So, NO LAW breaking in NY at least. On the other hand, in NJ red/blue lights (and sirens) are reserved for police use, red lights are reserved for all other emergency vehicles such as Fire Trucks and Ambulances. On these types of vehicles use is allowed by law (I am not sure if a specific permit is needed) these lights maybe activated anywhere the operator of the vehicles as jurisdiction, in the case of a private ambulance that is State Wide. For POV's for volunteers there are two types of permits you can get (these are issued by the MVC/DMV) red light however you must be at the rank of at least caption in our agency the permit request must be approved by the local council in the jurisdiction of the agency operates out of and the permit is only valid in that jurisdiction. Same rules apply for the blue light permits as well except that you do not have to have any rank. So, in NJ is this video breaking the law it depends but you sure do not have adequate information to say that they are.
Why would you think every jurisdiction is the same? From privileges/requirements like lights, sirens, required equipment, etc that's a more local issue. I live out of NY/NJ & Hatzolah members here can only respond with lights & sirens in the ambulance. Private vehicles cannot.
What a wonderful service! Bless you all.
forgot to put a c collar on him
You need to remember the main procedures of a paramedic if I was a paramedic I would put the C collar on first then put the person on the back board, place the person on the stretcher,go into the ambulance finally take the person to the hospital for treatment.
In this fictional depiction, the patient was ambulatory and showed no indications of spinal injury.
Their chief complaint was trauma to the head. They assessed the patient's level of alertness & pupil reaction, and proceeded to treat the gash.
Twotone media 😍👑
If the members in the video are communicating via LTE phones, why does the dispatcher have a Hytera radio on the table?
hello
Шалом братья!
hi
that poor thing always going by ambulance
2:23
That's not OSHA
Xcg
Who's the dispatcher? He sounds familiar
B-59
Hatzolah should not be a thing. Among the most incompetent jokester providers i’ve met.
Agreed.
You're probably the one who's incompetent so therefore your judgement is totally incompetent. I believe You don't even know how to check if a person is still alive probably would start CPR on decapitated Patients.....
How is it legal that they can respond in private vehicles with red & blue lights with a siren no less? Especially when they are volunteering…
Volunteer firefighters / emts by me out on Long Island don’t have all of those amenities unless they are a chief ..
Must be nice to break the law and get away with it
1-Your assuming that all the hundreds of Volunteers are breaking the law.
2- Every Volunteer is registered, legally allowed to have Lights and sirens.
3-Stop bassing your curropt logic, just because certain ppl cant, get your facts first.
Every volunteer has the correct equipment in their vehicle and is inspected annually by the department of health to be able to respond with lights and sirens as an ambulance
Hold on Long Island is in NY and Linden (which is where this agency is based out of) is in NJ with two very different set of laws regarding the use of lights and sirens in POVs. In NY Red lights (and Sirens) are reserved for authorized emergency vehicles, Blue light is reserved for Volunteer fighters and Green light is reserved for Volunteer EMTs, both Blue and Green permits are issued by the hiring agency, Red light permits however need to be issued by some government body in the case of EMS it's the DOH and DOH put out a list that it requires to authorize "fly cars" with red lights called Part 800.26b and Hatzalah makes all of their members meet those requirements and get inspected by the DOH to receive a red light permit. So, NO LAW breaking in NY at least.
On the other hand, in NJ red/blue lights (and sirens) are reserved for police use, red lights are reserved for all other emergency vehicles such as Fire Trucks and Ambulances. On these types of vehicles use is allowed by law (I am not sure if a specific permit is needed) these lights maybe activated anywhere the operator of the vehicles as jurisdiction, in the case of a private ambulance that is State Wide. For POV's for volunteers there are two types of permits you can get (these are issued by the MVC/DMV) red light however you must be at the rank of at least caption in our agency the permit request must be approved by the local council in the jurisdiction of the agency operates out of and the permit is only valid in that jurisdiction. Same rules apply for the blue light permits as well except that you do not have to have any rank. So, in NJ is this video breaking the law it depends but you sure do not have adequate information to say that they are.
Completely legal according to NYS law for sure
Why would you think every jurisdiction is the same? From privileges/requirements like lights, sirens, required equipment, etc that's a more local issue. I live out of NY/NJ & Hatzolah members here can only respond with lights & sirens in the ambulance. Private vehicles cannot.