the freezer at the cafe i used to work at had a panic button that shut off the cooling system completely in an emergency like this. the door obviously opened from the inside as well and the panic button never got used as far as i know, but it was good to know there was a fallback in case something like this ever happened.
@@medwards1993 Didn't check his airway either, looking at his apron it looks like he vomited like the kids did, so he could have missed him choking as well
"What part of observe did you not understand?" Probably the part where he paniced cuz he thought he was watching someone have a heart attack directly infront if him?
If you get tunnel Vision and panic when dealing with patience you shouldn't be in the profession at all, doing chest compression to a conscious patience is something you shouldn't do because you're dealing too much pain to the patient to the point of them going into shock. You never do just compression on a patient unless they are unconscious, you didn't do anything to help the patient other than giving him a lot of pain.
This first time working in a place with a freezer like that, the manager who was a drill sergeant went into drill sergeant mode on me saying to always put something in the way to block and prevent the door from closing
When my brother was a teenager at his first job at a drug store he got locked in the walk in due to a similar problem (door being busted and someone being too cheap to fix it). He was stuck in there for almost half an hour before he remembered he had his phone on him (despite company policies) and was able to call the store to get someone to let him out.
This show is notorious for failing to do research, but this is a new one. Everyone trained in CPR knows that cracked ribs indicate you were doing compressions properly. This show is getting worse.
Yeah bub that wasnt the point. But i do agree with the first part. The point is that he isn’t authorized to do ANYTHING like that. He’s literally there to observe. So because of that, if the patient wanted to…he could sue them
I like the idea of Charlie Sheen's brother's character about what to do with those kind of houses as long as there's no kids inside the building I mean let it go up have someone contact the gas company so it doesn't ignite other houses
the freezer at the cafe i used to work at had a panic button that shut off the cooling system completely in an emergency like this. the door obviously opened from the inside as well and the panic button never got used as far as i know, but it was good to know there was a fallback in case something like this ever happened.
I thought the rule was that it didn't matter if you cracked several ribs, because a non beating heart is worse!!
I think the issue is that he wasn't authorized to act as anything more than an assistant.
He didn’t check the patient for a pulse and didn’t check to see if the patient was breathing.
You’d panic too
@@Vee_breeze2767 me, nope. I’ve been a lifeguard for 10 years and had a WFR for two.
@@medwards1993 Didn't check his airway either, looking at his apron it looks like he vomited like the kids did, so he could have missed him choking as well
Ribs nearly always get cracked while doing chest compressions! The heart is protected by the rib cage!!!
Yes but you don't do chest compression to a conscious patient, The pain from cracking and bending the ribs can put the patient into shock.
@@jsb1100 yes, of course. If conscious there should be no need for chest compressions.
@@shellycarter155 No problem, glad we agree🙂
CPR is only necessary when the person isn't breathing. That dude was breathing. He cracked his ribs for no reason!
@@NativeWarrior88 chest compressions are ONLY necessary when the heart has stopped beating.
"What part of observe did you not understand?"
Probably the part where he paniced cuz he thought he was watching someone have a heart attack directly infront if him?
If you get tunnel Vision and panic when dealing with patience you shouldn't be in the profession at all, doing chest compression to a conscious patience is something you shouldn't do because you're dealing too much pain to the patient to the point of them going into shock.
You never do just compression on a patient unless they are unconscious, you didn't do anything to help the patient other than giving him a lot of pain.
AAAANNNDDDDD She drives over 40 in a neighborhood and runs a stop sign.
It's just a show
People do that all the time in real life what part of that do you not understand @@beyondtheborderlands12pre-68
Sadly works in real life as well.
Spoiler alert:
That woman’s addict daughter was living in that crackhouse
This first time working in a place with a freezer like that, the manager who was a drill sergeant went into drill sergeant mode on me saying to always put something in the way to block and prevent the door from closing
If I were this guy they pulled out of the freezer, and I survived I would quit that job.
6:29 - 6:37 I will take living and having cracked ribs over dying any day thank you very much
When my brother was a teenager at his first job at a drug store he got locked in the walk in due to a similar problem (door being busted and someone being too cheap to fix it).
He was stuck in there for almost half an hour before he remembered he had his phone on him (despite company policies) and was able to call the store to get someone to let him out.
This show is notorious for failing to do research, but this is a new one.
Everyone trained in CPR knows that cracked ribs indicate you were doing compressions properly.
This show is getting worse.
Yeah bub that wasnt the point. But i do agree with the first part. The point is that he isn’t authorized to do ANYTHING like that. He’s literally there to observe. So because of that, if the patient wanted to…he could sue them
Two of the firefighter characters on this show are firefighters in real life actually
The blood @ 0:19 looks like ketchup does anyone else see it?
Lol yeah! I’ve seen more convincing blood effects on Halloween decorations! 😂😂
@@Brianna-eo8nu 🤣🤣
Who cares? You want them to use real blood?
frozen blood perhaps
I like the idea of Charlie Sheen's brother's character about what to do with those kind of houses as long as there's no kids inside the building I mean let it go up have someone contact the gas company so it doesn't ignite other houses
That's not Charlie Sheen's brother. That's Treat Williams. He and Emilio Estevez don't look anything alike.
Condenser is on the roof. Evaporator is in the box!! No access from the roof inside, just refrigeration lines.
It was winter or fall time, qhy did they think a kid needed to be saved in the car in such a little amount of time
I miss the old Truck 81. RIP FDE269.
2:30
that is why I quit after the next ep show's.
What an idiot, why do compressions?
Christina Whirtter
Damn this show is terrible
It’s on season 13 now