Kwahati wrote: :hysteria: None taken, my friend.
I find another good way to silence the critics from our end is to simply not listen to and/or read them. I hate all the board X's out there at times like this with their ridiculous analysis and fake-ass "expert" opinions from people who know f*ck-all about the situation. [Although I'm still proud of Grumpy, Wallaby, and myself for making a correct diagnosis without ever actually seeing the patient! That should qualify us to be senators! :twisted: ]
Sure, let's be senators. I prefer being a Cast Member, actually. Wouldn't that be strange, going to Disney World, you get on KSR, and there is your State Senator, driving you around. You'd have that truck stopped at Cheers every time while people left, waiting to get their autographs.
Shorty82 wrote:Was there no AED there? Nothing I've read has said if it did or not. If there is one then maybe in the panic of the moment the CMs forgot about it.
I agree with Cranbiz about how it sounds here, but on an interesting side note, it was in Eyes and Ears today (or was it yesterday) that they are deploying 200 new AED's around property. I don't think they would have had time from this incident to yesterday to change 58,000 copies of E&E.
There should be an AED at pretty much every attraction, not just the thrill rides. In places like Fantasyland where a number of attractions are very close together then have one near the entrance of every couple attractions. An AED could be needed anywhere at anytime so should be available nearby no matter where you are at.
I agree with this.
AEDs should also be standard equipment on the buses, monorails, and boats. Putting them on the Safari trucks would also be a good idea as access to those trucks in an emergency is somewhat limited.
I disagree with putting the AED on the Safari truck for one basic reason: It might be too difficult to clear that bench so that no one is touching the victim. Those trucks are already packed, and laying the person down to start CPR would be difficult enough. To then add an electric current to that mix, you are risking more lives than the fibrillation victim.
Also, I'm betting the paramedics arrived very fast. My understanding is that there are paramedics on standby in all of the parks and DTD at all times during operating hours who drive what are essentially souped-up golf carts full of all kinds of medical supplies and that they arrive very, very quickly after being dispatched. I remember back at the end of either 2000 or 2001 I was walking near Splash and Big Thunder when I saw two paramedics pushing a gurney with medical supplies on it came up the hill that goes down and under the train station and disappeared through the crowd fast. I kind of tried to follow them but couldn't navigate the crowd as fast. They knew how to get through the crowd with their supplies very quickly and get to wherever they were going fast.
Basically, this is true. Actually, the fire stations are right at the edge of most of the parks. The one for DTD is the farthest away from its closest area, and that's about one mile. They do have the golf cart ones that can almost go anywhere, they even have one at the Magic Kingdom right under Main Street, ready to go. Shorty, if you saw the paramedics go under the train station, there wasn't much more to see, except which door to backstage they went through. They make it their business to understand every nook and cranny of the park closest to their station. In fact, I doubt dispatchers have to tell paramedics any more than "Saratoga Springs, Room 1234".