Meanwhile some poor sod is having no luck at all trying to play table tennis with a ben wa ball.
And Finally...
A place for odd or quirky world news stories.
Elsewhere in the Fediverse:
- !weirdnews@real.lemmy.fan
- !offbeat@lemmy.ca
- !nottheonion@lemmy.world
- !nottheonion@lemmy.ml
- !nottheonion@zerobytes.monster
- !aiop@lemmy.world
- !jingszo@lemmy.world
- !forteana@feddit.uk
- !strangetimes@lemmy.world
- !goodnews@feddit.uk
- !upliftingnews@lemmy.world
Rules:
- Be excellent to each other
- The Internet will resurface old "And finally..." material. Just mark it [VINTAGE]
The Commission found the officer was attempting to remove the object, without appropriate training and with an inappropriate instrument, which was outside his scope of practice.
This suggests that there is training and specific instruments available for this procedure. I light have expected that in Thailand as this must happen there occasionally but in New Zealand...?
Tassie isn't NZ.
But as an Australian I'm open to swapping them
Oops
The way I read this means that paramedics are not supposed to perform interventions they are not trained for, not that there is training available for specifically this and that he hadn't used it.
I am very unsure what the right and wrong of this situation are. But did the paramedic not try what pretty much any rational person would try, in an attempt to help the woman?
In those circumstances, I'd take her to hospital and not have a bit of a prod around.
Basically, the rules are very strict about what a paramedic can and can't do.
He acted outside the scope of his training.
Just stick a keyboard cleaner straw up around the ball and blast it with the cold stuff. Simple as