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17-01-2013, 01:58 PM | #31 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Just in case your were not sure, the whole of Australia is not in Metro Melbourne...... |
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17-01-2013, 02:05 PM | #32 | ||
N/A all the way
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Dont have an issue with emergency services being allowed to use the phone. How much "training" do they recieve to be able to do it safely? Probably very little, because it really isnt that dangerous.
I would like to see the law relaxed with talking on the phone, but strengthened for reading texts, and made every harder still - like a 3 month immediate loss of licence - for writing texts while driving. Those three are covered by the same rule, yet have hugely different true risks.
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17-01-2013, 02:05 PM | #33 | |||
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000 can do a call back then. Also, you also have a partner in the passenger seat who can make that call.
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17-01-2013, 02:11 PM | #34 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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17-01-2013, 02:13 PM | #35 | ||
Ich bin ein auslander
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What if he is in the back commencing resus? What's more important, 1mg of adrenaline IV or a phone call to let the resus team know you are coming in hot with an arrest?
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17-01-2013, 02:16 PM | #36 | |||
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1) The voice system connects via blue tooth. Only one phone can be connected at a time so if there are more than one copper at the time the system may be connected to the wrong phone. Of course the copper not driving could answer if they were not busy looking after a prisoner or any of the other jobs that require 100% concentration. 2) A small station may have 10 vehicles and 40 coppers so that requires 400 connections BEFORE the vehicles can be used. Large stations would be even worse. 3) The incoming calls are made to the person not the car and usually not from the chair. 4) Outgoing calls can be to anyone at all so you would need to program the entire white and yellow pages as well as all the unlisted numbers in Australia. No phone can hold all that data. 5) If the bluetooth is activated it will grab any phone in range that it knows about interrupting conversations of coppers who are just near the car not driving it. 6) Untrained voice command is average at best and under stressful situations voices can change. This could be compensated by trainig the systems with various voices and accents for each officer BEFORE the car goes into service. Voice systems often ring wrong numbers as well. So basically it would cost a fortune, waste enormous amounts of time, interfere with nore operations and be unreliable. |
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17-01-2013, 02:19 PM | #37 | ||
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17-01-2013, 02:19 PM | #38 | |||
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And i'd say i've called in a job more than 1-2 times a year on average. So the investment in upgrading radio is definitely worth it. Despite the driver training/experience we have, it's still a dangerous practice to use a handheld mobile and one that needs to be phased out. You can't say that driving code 1 to hospital with one hand on the wheel AND talking is safe. At least if you have 2 hands on the wheel while talking it is as safe as it will get.
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17-01-2013, 02:22 PM | #39 | ||
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Nothing is more important than medical care. If you're still talking under the context of finding the job, before you administer the medical care, then either your partner can find further information via phone or you can do it via the dispatcher. I don't understand your point?
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17-01-2013, 02:28 PM | #40 | ||
Ich bin ein auslander
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I disagree.
Most notification calls to hospital can be done by the person in the back or prior to departure leaving only the instance of major status changes in close proximity to hospital the only occasion time constraints do not allow other options. Any officer finding themselves having to call more than a few times a year is either a giant **** magnet or poorly prepared. In my view the risk is not worth the millions it would cost in infrastructure, that money can be better used elsewhere to improve patient outcomes. I am sorry but I see such policy and law changes for no benefit as needlessly making the job harder. I think you will find large scale changes in your service when it becomes free and you see the increase in the number of call outs that QLD did when it went free. How many vehicles does your service have? Ours has increased massively since the abolishment of a contribution system just to keep up with the volume of work.
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17-01-2013, 02:34 PM | #41 | |||
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Remember, law changes affect state wide, not just rural.
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17-01-2013, 02:35 PM | #42 | |||
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I think we agree on most things, I agree with you that you shouldn't need to call in more than 1-2 times a year. My point is that the law isn't relevant if you're the person in the back with the patient. Also, as I said in a previous post if you're still looking for the patient, the attendant/jockey can get that info. So again the driver talking while driving is not necessary. I can only talk from a Vic context where we do have the encrypted radio. But still, 99.5% of the time, the attendant (i.e passenger) is doing the radio work anyway, so you still shouldn't see the driver talking on his/her phone (for work) as often as we do. I have no doubt that it is exploited by emergency workers.
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17-01-2013, 02:38 PM | #43 | |||
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I can't see how having a dedicated ambulance mobile phone paired to a Bluetooth system could be a problem. Back in my non-emergency patient transport days, every ambulance had it's own mobile phone.
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17-01-2013, 02:40 PM | #44 | |||
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17-01-2013, 02:44 PM | #45 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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17-01-2013, 02:49 PM | #46 | ||
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I see a detective that lives near my home on one all the time in his SV6 Commodore (which should be fitted with bluetooth). 90% of cars and vans come with bluetooth, why cant they use that like the rest of us?
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17-01-2013, 02:50 PM | #47 | ||
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Countless times have I seen police doing the following:
• Talking on a mobile while driving and it clearly was not an emergency situation as they were very relaxed • Park in a No Stoping sign just to get some take away food • Speed by more than 20kmph with no sirens (non under cover cars) And my favourite …. Turning the siren on just to pass a congested traffic light and then turn it off and begin to cruise slowly, yeah they can’t be arsed to wait for the lights … Everyone takes advantage of whatever perks their job enables them ... If you want more perks then work for the government!
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17-01-2013, 02:54 PM | #48 | ||
Ich bin ein auslander
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For you and Dimka. Lodge a complaint with their respective service and let their department policies sort it out. Lets leave the law there for legitimate use and let department code of conduct sort out the bad eggs.
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17-01-2013, 02:55 PM | #49 | |||
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Real example: Injured person with 7 broken ribs, suspected neck and spine injuries on a road in a forestry region. 000 called. 000 cannot find the area despite it being very obvious of even google maps but as they are city people have no idea of the rest of the country other than on their computer. 000 told the nearest ambo was at a small town abou 15km away. 000 refused to be told which ambo "THEY WILL DECIDE WHICH AMBO". 000 send ambo from another town 100km away. Ambo gets lost. 000 keeps asking stupid questions like where is nearest post office and where is nearest street corner and cannot understant that there is somewhere in Australia that does not habe a post office or street corner within a a few hundred metres. 2 hr go by. Patient is getting a bit dehydrated and ants are starting to awarm. Ambo still lost. Give up on ambo and set off EPIRB. Chopper turns up 10 min later but cannot land close and does not want to do air extraction due to risk with spine. Chopper person at site rings ambo on personal phone and guides ambo in to allow transfer of patient from ground to chopper 2 km away. Radio did not work in area and chopper was on ground. Patient requires 6 days in ICU. The fact that YOU have never been in a situation does not mean it does not happen. And you are an ambo, not a firery, SES, RFS, copper or any of the other services that may need to use any methodology to complete their task. Coppers carry guns. They are not allowed to used them for hunting or pistol club but they have them in case they need to use them not to use all the time instead of other tools. If there was not an exemption in the law that allowed coppers to carry guns they could not legally use them. Emergency services can use phones if they have to without breeching the traffic act. They can also exceed the speed limit. This does not mean they are allowed to do 140km/h on the way to the fish and chips shop ringing ahead to grab 2 cod and chips. Seriously, if you cannot understand how there may be a situation that does not follow the normal rules and you cannot think outside the square to solve a problem then I wonder if you are in the right job...... |
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17-01-2013, 03:02 PM | #50 | ||
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As I said replying to geckoGT, more often than not, the partner/passenger should be doing the talking.
IF, you are single responding, then it is obviously different. I'm saying that down here we have a PTT foot button and can use the radio. If that digital radio technology isn't available, why can't handsfree bluetooth be used? I'm not saying that mobile phones are not necessary, i'm advocating that it is unsafe to use while driving unless using handsfree no matter how much experience a person has. I'm saying handsfree should be introduced into each single responder ambulance/police car etc. It is not expensive tech.
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17-01-2013, 03:08 PM | #51 | |||
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You just don't get it. If there was no exemption then it could not happen EVER and that may endanger lives. In the same way that if there was no speed exemption you could not exceed whatever going to a code one. As far as the hands free, read my above post it as not as simple and clear cut as you think. |
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17-01-2013, 03:11 PM | #52 | ||
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I only liked this not because im bashing cops, but because the detective who used to live behind me did it every afternoon... usually his wife would be 10 mins behind on hers too.
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17-01-2013, 03:16 PM | #53 | |||
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17-01-2013, 03:17 PM | #54 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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Lets conservatively say our service has 2000 vehicles (probably a lot more but that will do), each of which has to be provided with a phone and phone service. That phone and service would cost for arguments sake $1000 per year. Now add onto that the cost of a hands free kit which I just found one for $300 installed. Now you are up to $1300 per vehicle for the initial upgrade, ongoing costs remain every year after that. So the whole exercise now costs the service $2.6m. I am sorry but that is not inexpensive.
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17-01-2013, 03:20 PM | #55 | ||
Ich bin ein auslander
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Digital radio has coverage issues in rural areas so not a good option for large states such as QLD and WA.
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17-01-2013, 03:26 PM | #56 | ||
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Fair point. But you can still use PTT radio. Risking divulging personal info shouldn't be an issue over analogue as the handover shouldn't have any personal info included. I.e No names, address. Should just be Age, Gender, presenting problem, treating etc.
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17-01-2013, 03:30 PM | #57 | ||
Isn't it obvious?
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its inexpensive if it saves lives and injuries from inattentive driving while using a mobile phone...which is what they tell us
so are the lives and injuries worth the spending???
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17-01-2013, 03:45 PM | #58 | ||
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I got a ticket once for speeding. I asked the cop if he is allowed to speed, then why can't I?
He told me to use my common sense and made the fine bigger. I guess that same applies to this thread...
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17-01-2013, 03:46 PM | #59 | |||
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How far do you think your PTT radios actually go? That is outside the repeater network? We have areas up here that have little or no radio coverage but work great for NextG. This includes the main highways. |
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17-01-2013, 03:48 PM | #60 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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Now tired of hitting my head against the wall. Have the law changed, why would I care? I will be in the drivers seat unable to pass vital information, it's not my life at risk. I will go home at the end of my shift and not lose any sleep. Why? Because I did not ask for the change, I just did my job under the rules forced on me, that is why I won't care.
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