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Would You Bid for a Job?

Roland Piquepaille writes "Several U.S. hospitals have found an innovative way to deal with nursing shortage. They post shift openings and the highest hourly rate they're willing to pay on their internal networks. Then, the nurses bid online for these extra shifts. The lowest bidders get the shifts and are notified by e-mail. This bidding process is almost certainly a good thing for the hospitals, but is it good for the nurses? Or safe for you? And what will happen if other industries also adopt auction systems? Imagine a company telling you, "Hey, you want to make some extra dollars by building this car or writing this piece of software? Name your price, and you'll make some more cash." What do you think of this bidding process? Read more before posting your comments."

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  1. Wrong! by Aguila · · Score: 5, Informative

    I am an EMT, and I have to correct the parent's explanation of the triage system. He is correct that there are four different triage categories, green, yellow, red, and black. However, he is incorrect regarding the disposition of patients between the categories and how patients within the various categories are treated.

    Triage begins by pointing, and asking all people who can walk to go over to where we are pointing. This will correspond to the area we've decided to establish as the green triage area. Any patient who can follow directions and walk to a location we indicated is presumably relatively okay, and treatment of them can wait till last. Therefore, anybody who walks over there is automatically classified as green, or "walking wounded." This step is critical, as it saves a lot of assessment time, often clearing out 90% of potential patients, and allowing us to locate and evaluate the 10% of patients who need care urgently much faster.

    Next, a triage crew goes around evaluating all remaining patients, classifying them as either black, red, or yellow.

    This determination begins by checking if they have a pulse and are breathing. If they are not breathing, we will reposition the head once to open the airway, hoping that restarts their breathing. Here is the big difference in treatment between a triage (mass casualty, number of patients overwhelming the system) and a normal setting. Normally, if a patient is not breathing, we would attempt to resuscitate them using CPR, etc. However, in a triage situation, CPR is not viable, as devoting several EMT's to extended treatment of one individual who most likely will not survive will almost definitely result in the death of several other patients. So, in a triage situation, patients are declared dead and ignored who we would normally attempt to save. However, a key difference from what the parent claimed is that we would black tag these individuals, officially declaring them dead/unsalveagable.

    Red is used exclusively for those patients who are most critical, such as altered mental status, difficulty breathing (but breathing), etc., that will die without immediate medical care. The odds of survival of a patient who is not breathing are too low to justify spending time treating them, because for every one that you could save, you'd most likely lose several additional red tagged individuals on average. If you remember, I mentioned we try repositioning the airway once for all individuals who aren't breathing before we black tag them as dead. Repositioning the airway takes neglible time, and if doing so restores their breathing, then they are red tagged, because their odds of survival are sufficient to justify spending time on them. Red tagged patients are the only patients treated until there are no more red tagged patients. We do have to make tough choices (following protocol... We don't make decisions about who lives or dies, we follow protocol of how to choose who to treat to save the most lives.). Nor do we conceal that we are doing so, we clearly label as dead (black tag) individuals who we have negligible hope of saving when the attempt would cost others their lives.

    If you are breathing (and hence not black tagged), but will live if you do no receive immediate treatment, then you are tagged yellow, or "delayed", as the only remaining option. (Remember, "walking wounded" or green, have already been cleared out, so the only options are black, red, or yellow.)