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LPN - Nurse Officer?

Started by zippy, July 30, 2017, 12:29:09 AM

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zippy

Would a practical nurse LPN be a Nurse Officer? Or just registered?


arajca


MSG Mac

Michael P. McEleney
Lt Col CAP
MSG USA (Retired)
50 Year Member

zippy

#3
Quote from: MSG Mac on July 30, 2017, 04:40:54 AM
LPN is considered a "Health Technician" as are EMT's
https://www.capmembers.com/media/cms/CAPHealthServiceDisciplines_8BA051F_B688722FF1EF0.pdf

The list splits up "Professional" from "Technician." There is no mention of "officer." The division seems to be who has a bachelor degree or higher, except RN nurse. LPN is listed as non-bachelor degree, but I met LPNs with bachelor degrees. " Athletic Trainer" is listed as having bachelor degree, but 95% of athletic trainer probably have no degree.

Is it having a bachelor degree that permits the use of the term "Officer?"
Would a practical nurse without a bachelor degree be a "Nurse Technician?"
What if a LPN has a bachelor degree?

arajca

Referencing CAPR 160-1, sect. 1-8. "Only nurse categories will have the title "nurse officer.""

Referring to categories provided in the title break down, there is no "nurse" category. Hence, any nurse - RN, LPN, etc - should be a "nurse officer".

Eclipse

As an "LPN", per se, the member could serve as the unit's Nurse Officer, and would qualify for advanced promotion to
2nd Lieutenant.  The level of degree is irrelevant.

See 160-1, and 35-5.

"That Others May Zoom"

zippy

#6
Quote from: Eclipse on July 30, 2017, 04:03:01 PM
As an "LPN", per se, the member could serve as the unit's Nurse Officer, and would qualify for advanced promotion to 2nd Lieutenant.  The level of degree is irrelevant.

See 160-1, and 35-5.

Do the assistants wear a medical insignia? Would there be more than one officer?

QuoteIf a unit has more than one health professional assigned, the most senior in terms of level of
education and training should be the designated health service program officer and any others as
his/her assistants.

spaatzmom

I would like to know, what exactly is the point of even having the whole healthcare ratings since only basic aid can be performed within CAP?  Should anyone need advanced care, it is a call to  911 that needs to be made and anyone regardless of degree and or training is capable of doing that. 

PHall

Quote from: spaatzmom on July 30, 2017, 04:21:31 PM
I would like to know, what exactly is the point of even having the whole healthcare ratings since only basic aid can be performed within CAP?  Should anyone need advanced care, it is a call to  911 that needs to be made and anyone regardless of degree and or training is capable of doing that.

Well, at one time they could do more, but times change. And it's not just CAP either.
On Air Force Aeromedical Evacuation flights, the Flight Nurses can not give "over the counter" medications to a passenger, they have to have the Load Master do it.
It's because the passenger is not a patient and they can only treat their patients.
Now if a passenger has a "medical emergency" then heck yes, they can treat them then. But not for the "routine" stuff. ???

Eclipse

Quote from: zippy on July 30, 2017, 04:18:11 PM
Quote from: Eclipse on July 30, 2017, 04:03:01 PM
As an "LPN", per se, the member could serve as the unit's Nurse Officer, and would qualify for advanced promotion to 2nd Lieutenant.  The level of degree is irrelevant.

See 160-1, and 35-5.

Do the assistants wear a medical insignia? Would there be more than one officer?

QuoteIf a unit has more than one health professional assigned, the most senior in terms of level of
education and training should be the designated health service program officer and any others as
his/her assistants.

Whether or not you wear the Nurse Officer insignia is in no way connected to whether you
are appointed as, or ever served as a unit "Nurse Officer". 

There is no insignia for a unit "Nurse Officer", or any other unit staff other then Commander.

The Nurse Officer Badge is for those who are properly personally rated, is awarded once, and worn for the entity
of one's CAP career unless another insignia replaces it or can be worn in that space as an option.

Quote from: spaatzmom on July 30, 2017, 04:21:31 PM
I would like to know, what exactly is the point of even having the whole healthcare ratings since only basic aid can be performed within CAP?  Should anyone need advanced care, it is a call to  911 that needs to be made and anyone regardless of degree and or training is capable of doing that.

Zero  - It is an affectation of the USAF model with no purpose within a CAP paradigm.

"That Others May Zoom"

zippy

Quote from: Eclipse on July 30, 2017, 05:35:23 PM
The Nurse Officer Badge is for those who are properly personally rated, is awarded once, and worn for the entity of one's CAP career


So, as soon as a practical nurse is rated, the practical nurse wears the below badge?

Eclipse

Not exactly - wear of the badge is supposed to be approved by the CC after substantiation and before wear of it,
however in practical reality many members simply "do".

The badge above is not the current CAP nurse badge, this is:



And I don't think it's inappropriate to again raise the question as to whether or not you are a member.

"That Others May Zoom"

beachdoc

#12
Quote from: spaatzmom on July 30, 2017, 04:21:31 PM
I would like to know, what exactly is the point of even having the whole healthcare ratings since only basic aid can be performed within CAP?  Should anyone need advanced care, it is a call to  911 that needs to be made and anyone regardless of degree and or training is capable of doing that.

There are several answers to your comment.  First is the health services officer offers guidance to the commander as the most medically trained and qualified member in the unit.  It is important to have opinions available on health, medical, and safety matters.  EMT's, paramedics, nurses, physician extenders (NP's and PA's) and physicians all have a perspective on issues that others may not have or consider.

Secondly, while you are technically correct in stating that "basic aid" (whatever that is) is all that can be provided as a CAP member.  911 assets are, like the police, only minutes away when seconds matter.  Someone better trained than in ARC basic first aid is an asset in an emergency. 

I would not hesitate in an emergency to employ any skill I posses to save a life.  Imagine the consequences if I would fail to act and your (fill in the blank person important to you) died.  Your attorney would eat me alive.

The Army has recognized that someone may have advanced training or skills, despite not holding a medical MOS and designating them as a combat lifesaver

Just my $0.02 worth


Major Jeffery S Anderson, M.D., CAP
MAJ, MC, FS, USAR (ret)
Mission Pilot
Squadron Safety Officer/Medical Officer
MER-NC-022
ASMEL Instrument Airplane
Former FAA Senior AME

JayT

Quote from: zippy on July 30, 2017, 03:01:25 PM
Quote from: MSG Mac on July 30, 2017, 04:40:54 AM
LPN is considered a "Health Technician" as are EMT's
https://www.capmembers.com/media/cms/CAPHealthServiceDisciplines_8BA051F_B688722FF1EF0.pdf

The list splits up "Professional" from "Technician." There is no mention of "officer." The division seems to be who has a bachelor degree or higher, except RN nurse. LPN is listed as non-bachelor degree, but I met LPNs with bachelor degrees. " Athletic Trainer" is listed as having bachelor degree, but 95% of athletic trainer probably have no degree.

Is it having a bachelor degree that permits the use of the term "Officer?"
Would a practical nurse without a bachelor degree be a "Nurse Technician?"
What if a LPN has a bachelor degree?

You have no idea what you're talking about. Athletic Trainers are a protected title, and requires a degree.
"Eagerness and thrill seeking in others' misery is psychologically corrosive, and is also rampant in EMS. It's a natural danger of the job. It will be something to keep under control, something to fight against."

CyBorgII

#14
Quote from: JayT on August 05, 2017, 05:29:13 PM
You have no idea what you're talking about. Athletic Trainers are a protected title, and requires a degree.

Yes.  I do not know if the term "Sports Medicine" is used any more, or if it is synonymous with "Athletic Trainer," but I remember back in the late '70s when I was in junior high school, one of my PE teachers was one of the first people I knew of who got into the Sports Medicine field.  He had to take training up the wazoo in addition to the Physical Education degree he already held, and he did it while still teaching.  It was really a "gotta-wanna" thing for him. 

He eventually left teaching entirely and worked solely in his new field up until he retired.

And as far as the CAP Nursing insignia goes...as mentioned in another thread, one of my early squadron CC's had been an Air Force nurse in Vietnam, decorated for it, and was an RN.

I believe she told me that her RN status got her to come into the CAP as a Captain, but that was many years ago and memories fade.

However, she did nothing related to nursing in CAP in all the time I knew her, other than wear the insignia.

I do not even know what the regs are/were if, for example, one of our cadets got hurt doing PT, if she would have been able to treat said cadet or not.
Whaddaya mean I ain't kind?  I'm just not YOUR kind!

Ex-CAP Captain, now CG Auxiliary, but still feel a great deal of affection for the many good people in CAP.

JayT

Quote from: CyBorgII on August 06, 2017, 12:15:01 AM
Quote from: JayT on August 05, 2017, 05:29:13 PM
You have no idea what you're talking about. Athletic Trainers are a protected title, and requires a degree.

Yes.  I do not know if the term "Sports Medicine" is used any more, or if it is synonymous with "Athletic Trainer," but I remember back in the late '70s when I was in junior high school, one of my PE teachers was one of the first people I knew of who got into the Sports Medicine field.  He had to take training up the wazoo in addition to the Physical Education degree he already held, and he did it while still teaching.  It was really a "gotta-wanna" thing for him. 

He eventually left teaching entirely and worked solely in his new field up until he retired.

And as far as the CAP Nursing insignia goes...as mentioned in another thread, one of my early squadron CC's had been an Air Force nurse in Vietnam, decorated for it, and was an RN.

I believe she told me that her RN status got her to come into the CAP as a Captain, but that was many years ago and memories fade.

However, she did nothing related to nursing in CAP in all the time I knew her, other than wear the insignia.

I do not even know what the regs are/were if, for example, one of our cadets got hurt doing PT, if she would have been able to treat said cadet or not.

Most nurses aren't able to practice outside of their place of employment. There is nothing more annoying than a nurse or CNA running up to a scene while I'm working.
"Eagerness and thrill seeking in others' misery is psychologically corrosive, and is also rampant in EMS. It's a natural danger of the job. It will be something to keep under control, something to fight against."

PHall

Quote from: JayT on August 06, 2017, 02:08:51 PM
Quote from: CyBorgII on August 06, 2017, 12:15:01 AM
Quote from: JayT on August 05, 2017, 05:29:13 PM
You have no idea what you're talking about. Athletic Trainers are a protected title, and requires a degree.

Yes.  I do not know if the term "Sports Medicine" is used any more, or if it is synonymous with "Athletic Trainer," but I remember back in the late '70s when I was in junior high school, one of my PE teachers was one of the first people I knew of who got into the Sports Medicine field.  He had to take training up the wazoo in addition to the Physical Education degree he already held, and he did it while still teaching.  It was really a "gotta-wanna" thing for him. 

He eventually left teaching entirely and worked solely in his new field up until he retired.

And as far as the CAP Nursing insignia goes...as mentioned in another thread, one of my early squadron CC's had been an Air Force nurse in Vietnam, decorated for it, and was an RN.

I believe she told me that her RN status got her to come into the CAP as a Captain, but that was many years ago and memories fade.

However, she did nothing related to nursing in CAP in all the time I knew her, other than wear the insignia.

I do not even know what the regs are/were if, for example, one of our cadets got hurt doing PT, if she would have been able to treat said cadet or not.

Most nurses aren't able to practice outside of their place of employment. There is nothing more annoying than a nurse or CNA running up to a scene while I'm working.

They can comfort and try to keep your patient calm while you're working on them. And another set of "trained" hands comes in handy sometimes!

Eclipse

#17
Quote from: beachdoc on August 05, 2017, 03:53:17 PM
There are several answers to your comment.  First is the health services officer offers guidance to the commander as the most medically trained and qualified member in the unit.  It is important to have opinions available on health, medical, and safety matters. 

No, it's really not, punctuated by the lack of actual duties or expectations of the HSO program.  Members don't join for that, aren't interested in it,
and don't want to spend the few contact hours they have with CAP hearing about something best left to their PCF.

Safety is the purview of Safety, not HSO, and medical professionals don't necessarily bring anything more to the table
when discussing "Safety", then anyone else in a CAP.

When AMEs start giving members free flight physicals and MOs give cadets back to school physicals they could bring value to to the table,
beyond that, there's not much they bring then the average other member in terms of ability or knowledge that is relevent to CAP.

People always take statements like above personally, which they shouldn't.  It's simply the fact of the CAP program and how it has evolved over
decades thanks to lawyers and actuaries.  The problem CAP has is that instead of just putting it on the table CAP wants to make every
fell special, so they continue a number of directorates which are more affectation then mission effective because of the feels.

This is no different then giving a classically trained bassoonist a nicer gold shirt in the ARC and then having to deal with
his complaints that he can't use his bassoon to comfort those in a disaster area instead of handing out blankets.   One is a
mission critical task, one is a thing the ARC dimply doesn't do.

"That Others May Zoom"

EMT-83

Quote from: JayT on August 06, 2017, 02:08:51 PM
Most nurses aren't able to practice outside of their place of employment. There is nothing more annoying than a nurse or CNA running up to a scene while I'm working.

Yes there is: a doctor.

spaatzmom



Secondly, while you are technically correct in stating that "basic aid" (whatever that is) is all that can be provided as a CAP member.  911 assets are, like the police, only minutes away when seconds matter.  Someone better trained than in ARC basic first aid is an asset in an emergency. 

I would not hesitate in an emergency to employ any skill I posses to save a life.  Imagine the consequences if I would fail to act and your (fill in the blank person important to you) died.  Your attorney would eat me alive.

The Army has recognized that someone may have advanced training or skills, despite not holding a medical MOS and designating them as a combat lifesaver

Just my $0.02 worth
[/quote]

Let us also remember that CAP is NOT the military, it is a company with rules and regulations of its own.  You render aid beyond those company limits regardless of your training and or license and you are totally on your own as far as liability.  So unless you have an unlimited amount of money and a huge liability insurance policy that you are willing to risk losing, abide by the regulations cause this is when the attorney will indeed eat you alive since they would not be able to go after CAP.

And yes, I am a LPN but would follow the regulations of do what I can within CAP policies and dial 911 for beyond that.  I need my license too much to lose it. 

GroundHawg

If you will also note, you do not need to have a Bachelors to come in as a Captain, only the RN license. There are tons of "shake and bake" 1 and 2 year associates degree nursing programs whose grads are RN's.

spaatzmom

Quote from: GroundHawg on August 07, 2017, 12:43:58 PM
If you will also note, you do not need to have a Bachelors to come in as a Captain, only the RN license. There are tons of "shake and bake" 1 and 2 year associates degree nursing programs whose grads are RN's.

Very true plus all the hospital nursing schools that do not offer degrees but graduate their students as RN's.  They have been around for decades without any affiliation to a college or degree program.  Some of the best nurses I know have gone to these schools.

Pace

Quote from: spaatzmom on August 07, 2017, 08:55:26 PM
Quote from: GroundHawg on August 07, 2017, 12:43:58 PM
If you will also note, you do not need to have a Bachelors to come in as a Captain, only the RN license. There are tons of "shake and bake" 1 and 2 year associates degree nursing programs whose grads are RN's.

Very true plus all the hospital nursing schools that do not offer degrees but graduate their students as RN's.  They have been around for decades without any affiliation to a college or degree program.  Some of the best nurses I know have gone to these schools.
This is a new one for me. Is there a website for one of these schools?
Lt Col, CAP

spaatzmom

Not sure but many of my instructors were graduates of them.  Some include Salem Hospital School of Nursing,  Brigham and Women's Hospital School of Nursing, Brockton Hospital School of Nursing, Mercy Hospital School of Nursing, West Penn Hospital School of Nursing, Graham Hospital School of Nursing, are a few of the diploma schools of nursing and are usually 2 or 3 years in length.

Eclipse

http://www.riohondo.edu/health-science-and-nursing/30-unit-option/

"The 30 unit option (Non-Graduate) program is a one-year program for the applicant with a valid California Vocational Nurse license, who wish to quickly meet the requirements to take the NCLEX-RN examination as a non-graduate. LVNs who select this option may not change to the LVN-ADN Program once accepted.

The program is designed to prepare students for employment as a Registered Nurse, providing direct care to patients. The student should be aware that they may not change their status as a 30-unit option RN with the Board of Registered Nursing at any time after licensure. Individuals who become licensed as Registered Nurses using this option may not be eligible for licensure in states other than California. The program is approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing. The 30 unit option student will take the NCLEX-RN exam as a non-graduate. This status will not restrict their practice within California. They may have difficulty applying to a college/university for an advanced degree. See the Dean of Health Science and Nursing for further details."

"That Others May Zoom"

Pace

Interesting. These are equivalent to an ADN degree without actually receiving an academic degree.
Lt Col, CAP

Eclipse

Quote from: Pace on August 08, 2017, 12:44:11 AM
Interesting. These are equivalent to an ADN degree without actually receiving an academic degree.

Yep - leave it to Cali, as always, but it's understandable with the shortage of Nurses that's projected to be as high as 800k+ by 2020,
and as much as an additional 1MM+ for emergency and acute care nurses (accord to the BHP).

"That Others May Zoom"

spaatzmom

Several of my high school classmates went to Salem Hospital a 3 year program where they lived onsite all through their training.  They got their diploma and took their RN exams.  No requirement to having a LPN before starting.  Also a few classmates opted to go to Salem State College getting the same RN post exams but with a degree attached.  Both programs turned out excellent nurses but the college was more focused on academics where as the hospital was on patient care and practical application.  The degree nurses usually ended up with more administrative positions and the diploma grads were more hands on getting in the nitty gritty care that is needed.

spaatzmom

Quote from: Eclipse on August 08, 2017, 12:56:47 AM
Quote from: Pace on August 08, 2017, 12:44:11 AM
Interesting. These are equivalent to an ADN degree without actually receiving an academic degree.

Yep - leave it to Cali, as always, but it's understandable with the shortage of Nurses that's projected to be as high as 800k+ by 2020,
and as much as an additional 1MM+ for emergency and acute care nurses (accord to the BHP).

Funny they have been shouting about a nursing shortage since I went to school and graduated in 1976. Also these diploma schools have been around since the early 1900"s.  Granted many are now gone or have been swallowed by nearby colleges due to financial issues and the ideology that every career required a degree.  Lol, when my brother-in-law graduated from his local community college, I found it funny that he actually got an associates degree in automotive body work.  I thought that was something learned as an apprentice or at a tech school. 

Eclipse

Quote from: spaatzmom on August 08, 2017, 01:13:02 AM
Funny they have been shouting about a nursing shortage since I went to school and graduated in 1976. Also these diploma schools have been around since the early 1900"s.  Granted many are now gone or have been swallowed by nearby colleges due to financial issues and the ideology that every career required a degree.  Lol, when my brother-in-law graduated from his local community college, I found it funny that he actually got an associates degree in automotive body work.  I thought that was something learned as an apprentice or at a tech school.

That's what you get at a lot of tech schools because an AA apparently holds more sway at Jiffy Lube then just a certificate.

Apprenticeships still exist, especially in the major trades, but in most cases the lines are long, political,
and they still expect you to go to school at night.

"That Others May Zoom"

beachdoc



You are confused about a few things.

First relates to your apparent concerns regarding medical liability.  Simple provision of medical care is not malpractice.  Treatment of a patient is not malpractice.  Medical malpractice is any act or omission by a physician during treatment of a patient that deviates from accepted norms of practice in the medical community and causes an injury to the patient.

All but a few physicians have medical liability insurance.  Those that don't are obligated to self insure.  They are foolish, IMO.

Being sued in a malpractice case is not grounds for loss of license for either doctors nor nurses.  That is a common worry for nurses, but I have never heard of it occurring in the nearly 50 years I have been hanging out with nurses.

The next issue is duty to render aid.  I am under no legal duty to stop at an accident on the roadway, nor assist a fellow diner in a restaurant who chokes on a bite of meat.  If I choose to do so, and I have, I have a duty to that person to provide medical care to a common standard of practice using what is available to me.

Should a fellow CAP member be injured or have an allergic reaction to a bee sting, for example, I believe a duty to act exists as I have a relationship with that member and would take whatever measures required given the resources at hand to render immediate care. 

That is different than doing routine medical care; providing care to all comers through a "sick call"; providing care to a member at a meeting for a preexisting, or new for that matter, medical condition; or performing aviation medical examinations for pilots at a meeting or other official activity.  Those activities are clearly banned.

The primary reason there is a ban on provision of medical services through the CAP is liability.  The organization would be required to credential individual providers to insure they are capable of providing safe medical care.  In the past, in the 60's when I initially joined CAP, Pennsylvania Wing had a "field hospital", likely equipped with scrounged Public Health Service Disaster Hospitals.  That was then and this is now.
http://captalk.net/index.php?action=post;topic=22331.0;num_replies=29
As far as the comments regarding an HSO offering safety advice and counseling the commander regarding medical matters, I will remind the writer eclipse that HSO's exist at Squadron and Wing level to promote health and safety officially as members of the commander's staff.

New guidance will be soon available from National thanks to the appointment of a staff Health Services Officer.  What changes and opportunities that will bring are yet to be revealed.  My wing HSO is quite impressed following a telephone chat with the newly designated NHQ HSO.
Major Jeffery S Anderson, M.D., CAP
MAJ, MC, FS, USAR (ret)
Mission Pilot
Squadron Safety Officer/Medical Officer
MER-NC-022
ASMEL Instrument Airplane
Former FAA Senior AME

spaatzmom

Quote from: beachdoc on August 12, 2017, 04:50:27 PM


You are confused about a few things.

First relates to your apparent concerns regarding medical liability.  Simple provision of medical care is not malpractice.  Treatment of a patient is not malpractice.  Medical malpractice is any act or omission by a physician during treatment of a patient that deviates from accepted norms of practice in the medical community and causes an injury to the patient.

All but a few physicians have medical liability insurance.  Those that don't are obligated to self insure.  They are foolish, IMO.

Being sued in a malpractice case is not grounds for loss of license for either doctors nor nurses.  That is a common worry for nurses, but I have never heard of it occurring in the nearly 50 years I have been hanging out with nurses.

The next issue is duty to render aid.  I am under no legal duty to stop at an accident on the roadway, nor assist a fellow diner in a restaurant who chokes on a bite of meat.  If I choose to do so, and I have, I have a duty to that person to provide medical care to a common standard of practice using what is available to me.

Should a fellow CAP member be injured or have an allergic reaction to a bee sting, for example, I believe a duty to act exists as I have a relationship with that member and would take whatever measures required given the resources at hand to render immediate care. 

That is different than doing routine medical care; providing care to all comers through a "sick call"; providing care to a member at a meeting for a preexisting, or new for that matter, medical condition; or performing aviation medical examinations for pilots at a meeting or other official activity.  Those activities are clearly banned.

The primary reason there is a ban on provision of medical services through the CAP is liability.  The organization would be required to credential individual providers to insure they are capable of providing safe medical care.  In the past, in the 60's when I initially joined CAP, Pennsylvania Wing had a "field hospital", likely equipped with scrounged Public Health Service Disaster Hospitals.  That was then and this is now.
http://captalk.net/index.php?action=post;topic=22331.0;num_replies=29
As far as the comments regarding an HSO offering safety advice and counseling the commander regarding medical matters, I will remind the writer eclipse that HSO's exist at Squadron and Wing level to promote health and safety officially as members of the commander's staff.

New guidance will be soon available from National thanks to the appointment of a staff Health Services Officer.  What changes and opportunities that will bring are yet to be revealed.  My wing HSO is quite impressed following a telephone chat with the newly designated NHQ HSO.

I'm sorry, but I am far from confused.  I have been a duly licensed LPN since 1976.  I have been around the barn so to speak a few times.  My personal liability insurance is not of the caliber of an MD.  If I in the duty of CAP or my employer go beyond what corporate policies state, I am SCREWED and yes I can potentially lose my license.  You are reflecting your view of this issue from a MD standpoint not a lowly nurse.

Eclipse

#32
Quote from: beachdoc on August 12, 2017, 04:50:27 PM
As far as the comments regarding an HSO offering safety advice and counseling the commander regarding medical matters, I will remind the writer eclipse that HSO's exist at Squadron and Wing level to promote health and safety officially as members of the commander's staff.

Thank you for the reminder, however the point was missed.

HSOs, regardless of the rating, can't "advise the CC" on any matters beyond the types of things that any other reasonable
adult with relevent experience could, which is why the existence of the Health Services Directorate, is a mission-less unicorn.
Matters regarding prostates, heart ailments, vitamins, or other click-bait nonsense that thousands of members have to
endure politely each year during "briefings" are not what members join for, and are wholly inappropriate for CAP meetings or
newsletters, any more then prolonged lectures on the use of De-icing boots are for the lower 48 (BTDT).

There are no duties, no specialty track, nor higher expectations, which warrant advanced grade, ticket-punching PD, or a special staff position,
and further, NHQ states explicitly that if you decide to John Wayne a situation (which in some states you will have no choice but to do, once aware),
you're on your own. (And you wouldn't' even be there on your horse absent a CAP ES rating, which has a complete doctrine and is focused
on self / buddy care / stabilization until professional EMS arrives.)

My advice to health professionals, LEOs, and even fire people has always been to keep themselves out of that line of fire
by not engaging in CAP activities that put them at risk.  They rarely listen because of the nature of their disability (namely
"service before self", "citizenship", an "innate inability to watch people suffer", something most CAP members deal with in various levels).

Quote from: beachdoc on August 12, 2017, 04:50:27 PM
New guidance will be soon available from National thanks to the appointment of a staff Health Services Officer.  What changes and opportunities that will bring are yet to be revealed.  My wing HSO is quite impressed following a telephone chat with the newly designated NHQ HSO.

You must be new to CAP.

"That Others May Zoom"

Ned

Quote from: Eclipse on August 13, 2017, 03:52:10 PM
HSOs, regardless of the rating, can't "advise the CC" on any matters beyond the types of things that any other reasonable
adult with relevent experience could,

Cite, please.

Eclipse

Quote from: Ned on August 13, 2017, 04:09:44 PM
Quote from: Eclipse on August 13, 2017, 03:52:10 PM
HSOs, regardless of the rating, can't "advise the CC" on any matters beyond the types of things that any other reasonable
adult with relevent experience could,

Cite, please.

I'd ask the same of you to indicate what you think are appropriate.  Anything beyond what is in the CP, ES, or SE manuals
which are pretty much focused on hydration and fatigue, are inappropriate, if for no other reason then they are irrelevant to CAP.

Or should we see about getting Dr. Oz to join and push health supplements on the back page of the volunteer?

"That Others May Zoom"

Ned

Quote from: Eclipse on August 13, 2017, 04:14:08 PM
Quote from: Ned on August 13, 2017, 04:09:44 PM
Quote from: Eclipse on August 13, 2017, 03:52:10 PM
HSOs, regardless of the rating, can't "advise the CC" on any matters beyond the types of things that any other reasonable
adult with relevent experience could,

Cite, please.

I'd ask the same of you to indicate what you think are appropriate. [. . .]

So, you have absolutely nothing to support your assertion?  I kinda thought so, I just wanted to be sure I hadn't missed anything.

In that case you might want to consider correcting your unsupported statement quoted above.


(Bob, it's OK to make mistakes.  We all do.  I know I certainly do.  But then good leaders try to correct them.)



Eclipse

Quote from: Ned on August 13, 2017, 04:58:11 PM
So, you have absolutely nothing to support your assertion?  I kinda thought so, I just wanted to be sure I hadn't missed anything.

Sorry Ned, that's not how arguments work.  I know exactly what is appropriate to CAP medical issues, and have literally
said so in this thread. 

If you believe that assertion is incorrect, cite the CAP document which indicates what else is supposed to be included,
and the level which requires a medical professional, vs. an experiences member / parent to be able to discuss that same
information.

CAP has, over the years, published any number of documents, indexes, and regs in regards to hydration, heat indexes, cold
safety, and crew rest.  That's the lane, and doesn't need a unit HSO to read the slide.

Cite anything else which would require an MD, Rn, LPN, or even an EMT.

"That Others May Zoom"

PHall

Quote from: Eclipse on August 13, 2017, 05:31:00 PM
Quote from: Ned on August 13, 2017, 04:58:11 PM
So, you have absolutely nothing to support your assertion?  I kinda thought so, I just wanted to be sure I hadn't missed anything.

Sorry Ned, that's not how arguments work.  I know exactly what is appropriate to CAP medical issues, and have literally
said so in this thread. 

If you believe that assertion is incorrect, cite the CAP document which indicates what else is supposed to be included,
and the level which requires a medical professional, vs. an experiences member / parent to be able to discuss that same
information.

CAP has, over the years, published any number of documents, indexes, and regs in regards to hydration, heat indexes, cold
safety, and crew rest.  That's the lane, and doesn't need a unit HSO to read the slide.

Cite anything else which would require an MD, Rn, LPN, or even an EMT.


Bob, Ned helped write the current Health Services reg, so I bet he knows what it says and what the intent is too.

Ned

Quote from: Eclipse on August 13, 2017, 05:31:00 PM
Sorry Ned, that's not how arguments work.

Really?  I'm pretty sure I know how arguments work.  We even studied that stuff in school.  Seriously, we had classes on "argument."  I even teach that stuff to argument professionals.

In a normal argument (reasons and facts given to persuade another), when someone makes an assertion of fact, typically they can asked to support their assertion with some authority.

Because if their specific assertion of fact is false, that suggests that perhaps their entire premise, positions, and arguments are likely to be . . . . (wait for it) . . . false.


Here, you were in the midst of arguing to others your thesis that the HSO program is a complete waste of time and effort, and indeed detrimental to the organization when you made the rather breathtaking assertion that

Quote from: Bob WilliamsHSOs, regardless of the rating, can't "advise the CC" on any matters beyond the types of things that any other reasonable
adult with relevent experience could.

It seemed at odds with my experience (and if you were honest, I expect yours as well), if nothing else because as a frequent encampment and NCSA commander I routinely rely on the advice of an HSO in reviewing the various F160s that are submitted. 

As in, "hey, Doc, this kid says he/she has Osgood Schlatter's Disease / Raynaud's Syndrome / ADD / a cast on their left arm / an inhaler for allergenic asthma / (whatever).  Look at this F160 and tell me what sort of limitations and restrictions should I anticipate and plan for?  What does her/his flight staff and FTO need to know to help make sure the cadet is successful?"

And I both expected and received advice from an educated, certificated health professional that I would not expect to get from your "any reasonable adult."


I'm not trying to sharpshoot you here.  If you meant something other than what you said, now would be a good time to explain.

All you need to do is support your specific assertion about what HSOs can or can't do. 

And not try to suggest that others have to somehow disprove your assertion.  Which is hard for us to do when it appears to be false.


Just go ahead and tell us why you think HSOs cannot give commanders professional advice.

Heck, I think I can even save you some time by telling you not to look at paragraph 1-7(f) of the CAPR 160-1.

Because that says
Quote from: CAPR 160-1Health service officers advise these commanders on safe participation of members after reviewing CAP 160 series forms and assist in making needed preparations at an activity to make participation as safe as possible for members.

Which I don't think helps your assertion very much.