Quote by Mallock2006
I think the saying goes soemthing like "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing"
Quote by Freckledbird
I think the saying goes soemthing like "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing"
Quote by Eltigre
I think the saying goes soemthing like "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing"
Quote by duncanlondon
The two community police officers were there and they did know what they chose to do.
Again this is something that training had prepared them for.
Quote by Mallock2006
I think the saying goes soemthing like "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing"
Quote by Eltigre......
It's still hypothetical - none of us knows absolutely what we'd do until we are in that situation.
Quote by Eltigre
I think the saying goes soemthing like "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing"
Quote by Freckledbird......
It's still hypothetical - none of us knows absolutely what we'd do until we are in that situation.
Quote by Eltigre
With respect it is this situation that I am talking about.![]()
Conditioned response is the whole idea of training be it in the armed forces, the police force or fire service. With training your actions become more automatic and therefore predictable and though circumstances may and do change you are able to predict fairly well how you will respond. This is especially true when you are dealing with similar situations on a regular basis.
I agree, it is difficult for people who have not been trained or experienced situations like this to accurately predict how they would react.
Eltigre
Quote by Mallock2006
I think the saying goes soemthing like "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing"
Quote by Dawnie
I'm trained in CPR, I'm trained to use a DeFib machine and was on call in our local area a while back. I was fairly confident in what I knew, been over it a dozen of times. I'd coped with emergencies in the family home more than once so I was more than happy with any situation that I would be thrown into.
The only time the phone went and I had to go and assist an incident, I almost shit my pants
I couldn't remember where the road was and considering Ian had live in it years before, my mind had stupidly gone blank.
Took me a minute to gather my thoughts and even then, Ian drove me.
Gladly I wasn't needed in the end but it just goes to show, we have no way of knowing how we will behave in any given situation.
Quote by Freckledbird
With respect it is this situation that I am talking about.![]()
Conditioned response is the whole idea of training be it in the armed forces, the police force or fire service. With training your actions become more automatic and therefore predictable and though circumstances may and do change you are able to predict fairly well how you will respond. This is especially true when you are dealing with similar situations on a regular basis.
I agree, it is difficult for people who have not been trained or experienced situations like this to accurately predict how they would react.
Eltigre
Quote by Freckledbird
With respect it is this situation that I am talking about.![]()
Conditioned response is the whole idea of training be it in the armed forces, the police force or fire service. With training your actions become more automatic and therefore predictable and though circumstances may and do change you are able to predict fairly well how you will respond. This is especially true when you are dealing with similar situations on a regular basis.
I agree, it is difficult for people who have not been trained or experienced situations like this to accurately predict how they would react.
Eltigre
Quote by Eltigre
I think the saying goes soemthing like "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing"
Quote by bbw_lover
I think the saying goes soemthing like "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing"
Quote by Eltigre
If you look back at my posts I made a point of saying that blame should not be apportioned. I am not questioning how anyone behaved other than saying that IMHO it is better to try resuscitate in this situation than to do nothing. Nor have I ever mentioned whether they should or should not have jumped in that was their choice.
I don’t consider myself to be special but I do know what I would have done in that situation.
Eltigre
Quote by Eltigre
In this situation, the point I am trying to make, none too well, is that if a person is not breathing and their heart is not beating. No professional help is likely to get there in time. They are not going to live. Trying to give CPR is their only hope. You might not do it as to the current prescribed instructions but......if you are able to get their heart started and they start breathing they might just live.
If in the process you manage to break a rib, tear intercostal muscles or fracture the sternum (in the case of very young or old people)if they live they are unlikely to complain. If they do not resuscitate what is the difference, at least you tried.
Eltigre
Quote by Freckledbird
If you look back at my posts I made a point of saying that blame should not be apportioned. I am not questioning how anyone behaved other than saying that IMHO it is better to try resuscitate in this situation than to do nothing. Nor have I ever mentioned whether they should or should not have jumped in that was their choice.
I don’t consider myself to be special but I do know what I would have done in that situation.
Eltigre
Quote by Freckledbird
In this situation, the point I am trying to make, none too well, is that if a person is not breathing and their heart is not beating. No professional help is likely to get there in time. They are not going to live. Trying to give CPR is their only hope. You might not do it as to the current prescribed instructions but......if you are able to get their heart started and they start breathing they might just live.
If in the process you manage to break a rib, tear intercostal muscles or fracture the sternum (in the case of very young or old people)if they live they are unlikely to complain. If they do not resuscitate what is the difference, at least you tried.
Eltigre