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I am so glad I live in Australia. Here everyone is expected to help in an emergency, not stand around waiting for the right equipment. That's the whole thing with emergencies - the optimum equipment is rarely available.
My 15 year old daughter is doing life saving training as aprt of her sport/PE traingin at school.
Mind you, I'm in a bush area, not a city. We still live in the real world.
I'm just amazed that your police and ambos etc aren't trained. I think ours need a Bronze Medallion in Life Saving as a basic requirement (I could be wrong).
REMEC
I'm reminded of Navy Corpsmen who accompany Marines into battle. Theyre not infantry, and most are unarmed. And almost all of them put their asses on the line to aid wounded Marines.
The medic in the story is a coward.
OG
It's worse than you imagine. He now has a reputation for hiding behind the 'book.'
When the TITANIC was sinking an American ship, S.S.CALIFORNIAN, was on the scene and refused to assist. The Master offered plausible excuses: his ship was small, etc.; but he saved NO ONE. I understand no one would hire him after the tragedy.
OG
If youre okay with a first responded doing nothing while someone drowns, I'm okay with your judgment. But I suspect most people condemn the man as a coward.
When my truck arrived at the scene a crowd of spectators and cops loitered about on the road. One, solitary cop was in the water trying to keep the kids from drowning, inside the car. His associates, in starched uniforms and patent-leather shoes, wouldnt help him.
OG
Like I said, if youre okay with it, I'm okay with your judgment. And I'll feel angry when someone allows you to drown.
OGGBASHAN said:Training for rescue from water starts by emphasising that you do NOT go into the water unless you are properly prepared, trained and equipped. There was a recent rescue reality programme on UK TV which showed a drunk diving into a harbour about 2am. His friends called the emergency services when he didn't surface. Some of them jumped in. They got into difficulties themselves and had to be rescued before the emergency services could look for the original drunk. It was three hours before he was found - dead - but several of his "rescuers" needed hospital treatment.
BLACKIE
Yep. Thems the rules. No one will get in any official trouble sticking to the rules. And everyone knows, too, that you wont expose yourself to risk in an emergency.
Trust me, I've been there and confronted the raw fear of death. I dont wish it on anyone. And when you confront it it becomes the Moment of Truth for you. It brands you for eternity. People sense it.
Indeed, Og. I confess that if I did see someone in trouble in the water, undoubtedly I would focus more on the fact that I was trained and can swim than on the fact that I haven't been in lifeguarding shape in a decade or more, and quite possibly make myself one of those idiots who gets killed trying to rescue someone when it's obviously not a good idea.But even in my blind impulsiveness I think would balk at jumping in after a body that was never going to breath again.
As a note to those whose altruism and/or poor impulse control might also land them in the water with a panicked person in need of rescue, might I suggest:
(1) A chain of people holding hands from the shore is a great deal more helpful than a single person going it alone.
(2) Bring anything, absolutely anything with you that you can offer the swimmer to hold onto other than you. A stick, a jacket, your trousers that you're about to shuck off anyway - anything that lets the swimmer grab a non-you item is a very helpful thing.
(3) If you absolutely must go in alone, if there's any chance of it at all, approach from behind and grab the swimmer in a carry. Saves all of that nasty "crawling up your head" business.
(4) If you're grabbed, head downward. It won't always work, but it is the one place the panicked person definitely doesn't want to go.
I'm WSI-certified (Water Safety Instructor), have been since I was 17, and I keep my certification current. I've pulled people from the water, and like Shang, almost been drowned in the process - in fact, one girl I had to punch in the side of the head, almost knock her out, so that I could save us both.
I don't blame someone who isn't trained for not wanting to go in the water after someone in trouble. Even those who are trained, like me, have problems with someone that's in a panic.