
https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/ ... ht/609271/

https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/coronav ... l/2356265/Grim New Rules for NYC Paramedics: Don’t Bring Cardiac Arrests to ER for Revival
As the coronavirus stretches New York City emergency rooms and paramedics to their limits, a regional EMT group has issued new guidelines almost unthinkable even days ago -- if someone's in cardiac arrest and you can't revive them in the field, don't bring them to the emergency room.
The newly implemented order that takes effect Thursday was implemented in an effort to control the surge of patients in hospitals due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
The guidance from the Regional Emergency Medical Services Council of New York City applies to the city as well as Nassau and Suffolk counties. The group, known as REMSCO, is the state-designated coordinating authority for the region.



Presumably because they are dead
You can do CPR on the way but the odds of survival are bad.
I thought the EMTs had to keep up the pretense of resuscitation on a dead person at least until a licensed medical doctor officially calls the TOD.MajGenl.Meade wrote: ↑Fri Apr 03, 2020 12:24 pmHmmm, but I took "can't revive" to mean they be dead. And after they is dead, leave 'em there




"In cardiac arrest...." the heart has stopped. The ambulance people do their best for a few minutes. Still dead. Don't bring the body here through ten minutes of traffic (or 20 or 25)."A few minutes"
Exactly, like it or not, you have to marshall your available resources to their 'Best" (or "better") uses. Of course, republicans don't like that because it reeks of death panels.
I don't know about NYC, but in my area the paramedics come to most cardiac incidents and often have a physician on board (usually a resident); even if they do not they are in contact with the hospital and telemetry can send all necessary data to the hospital for the physicians to review.I thought the EMTs had to keep up the pretense of resuscitation on a dead person at least until a licensed medical doctor officially calls the TOD.
Don't bring the body here through ten minutes of traffic (or 20 or 25).
This happened to my Aunt Nancy just over 4 years ago; she went into cardiac arrest getting into my cousin's car in the driveway to go to Urgent Care because she'd been feeling really lousy for days and my cousin had finally convinced her to get checked out. My cousin, an LPN, started CPR while EMTs were on the way; when they arrived, they continued CPR while transporting my Aunt to the nearest high level ER, about 15 minutes away by ambulance in Brockton. Using the better stuff available at the hospital, the doctors and nurses in the ER were able to get her back - but she had suffered massive brain damage from her time off-line. They intubated her and put her on a vent and sent her through some scans to check on brain activity and in this process they found that her body was riddled with lung cancer that had metastasized to her brain, so she was terminally ill even if she'd been revived. My cousin waited for me to arrive from Maine and in the wee hours of the following day, she was removed from life support and we sat quietly by her bedside holding her hands while her body struggled to breath on its own and then after about 45 minutes she passed away.Lord Jim wrote: ↑Fri Apr 03, 2020 12:38 pmPeople have many times been revived and lived after having a stopped heart for a few minutes (especially with the assistance of CPR during that period) with the equipment and resources available at a hospital that were superior to what was available in the ambulance.