Quizzes & Puzzles41 mins ago
Morbid Question
177 Answers
If an elderly relative died at home during the night, who would you ring?
I don't mean family, i mean doctors/hospital, etc?
The doctors will obviously be shut & it obviously won't be a 999 emergency.
I don't mean family, i mean doctors/hospital, etc?
The doctors will obviously be shut & it obviously won't be a 999 emergency.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We did ask the family to leave cos once we said yes she was dead we "tidied her up" just a bit and let family back in. Later after theyd had time we had to get them to leave. Doc confirmed and then we can perform last offices xxx
Onetime!!! Junior doc could still feel a pulse after we had telephoned the family down south to say mud had passed!! Omg!! Turned out was the docs own pulse!! Jeez oh that was scary ha x
Onetime!!! Junior doc could still feel a pulse after we had telephoned the family down south to say mud had passed!! Omg!! Turned out was the docs own pulse!! Jeez oh that was scary ha x
Tinkerbell:
Beware of the 'torch in the eyes' test!
When I was a school first aider I was asked to take a look at one of the CDT teachers who was feeling unwell. I tried shining a torch into both of her eyes and got no pupil response at all! Based upon that, she ought to have been dead (despite the fact that she was talking reasonably coherently to me!). Having checked that she'd not recently suffered excessive 'feminine' bleeding (which could have resulted in a similar lack of pupil response), I worked out that she must have been drugged by contact with fumes in the workshop and called an ambulance to take her to hospital.
Beware of the 'torch in the eyes' test!
When I was a school first aider I was asked to take a look at one of the CDT teachers who was feeling unwell. I tried shining a torch into both of her eyes and got no pupil response at all! Based upon that, she ought to have been dead (despite the fact that she was talking reasonably coherently to me!). Having checked that she'd not recently suffered excessive 'feminine' bleeding (which could have resulted in a similar lack of pupil response), I worked out that she must have been drugged by contact with fumes in the workshop and called an ambulance to take her to hospital.
Ratter, a doctor didn't confirm the actual death of my uncle, but the doc had seen him that morning and told the manager at the nursing home that death was imminent. He died a couple of hours later. I knew that he'd died.....I watched him stop breathing.
I expected to feel sad, but in fact, I felt relief for him. He was ready to go and had been suffering with advanced cancer for several weeks.
I expected to feel sad, but in fact, I felt relief for him. He was ready to go and had been suffering with advanced cancer for several weeks.
Chris, it is not my job to confirm death, that's why I call A Dr, I said "in my experience" our deaths are nearly always predicted and rarely unexpected, I also stated that a Dr. usually attends hours after death when death is quite obvious, even placing a stethoscope on a person that has been dead for 3 hours is purely academic.
Ratter15:
For 'academic', read 'pointless'!
I've known of customers who've boarded trains to be dead by the end of their journey (of not much over an hour, so they couldn't have been dead for very long by the time they arrived at their destination). The platform staff have simply waited for a quiet moment before dragging the body into a storeroom, in order to keep the train running on time. When they've had time, they'd eventually get round to calling a funeral director (leaving the formalities of certifying death up to him).
For 'academic', read 'pointless'!
I've known of customers who've boarded trains to be dead by the end of their journey (of not much over an hour, so they couldn't have been dead for very long by the time they arrived at their destination). The platform staff have simply waited for a quiet moment before dragging the body into a storeroom, in order to keep the train running on time. When they've had time, they'd eventually get round to calling a funeral director (leaving the formalities of certifying death up to him).