Accident Management
Help your fellow riders
by thinking ahead,
being prepared
After
an accident, the people you ride with want to be useful. They will
feel helpless enough if they aren't medical professionals with
adequate gear to start making a difference, for in serious accidents,
first aid seems superficially valuable or is even impossible to
render. If they have access to communications and to important
information, however, they can still help save your life. In light of
Karen Miller's accident last November, here are some tips I gleaned
from dealing with an emergency situation. The first four are offered
to enable your fellow riders to help you immediately, the rest over
the longer term.
Carry a cellular phone when you ride, if possible. If you don't have
one, ask who in the group has one and where on the bike it is kept.
Carry legible ID and keep it current. If you've moved since your
driver's license was issued, you can get a ticket for failing to
update it -- as well as cause confusion about such basics as
"where does she live?" Check or sign the organ donor box
on it, if you would want to donate in a worst-case scenario.
Carry a list of medications you take routinely and keep it current.
List allergies or medical conditions that EMS techs/doctors need to
know about to treat you.
Carry a list of persons to contact and their current telephone
numbers, including area codes. If those living with you are likely
to be hard to reach, or you live alone, friends who ride with you
should be able to figure out easily who to call from information on
your bike or your person. (Even if they can gain access to your home
by taking your keys from the scene, it doesn't mean they can find
your address book.) Karen had thought to carry names and telephone
numbers of relatives and friends with her, which saved her fellow
riders a lot of stress after LifeFlight left, when they started the
notification process.
Hospital
and emergency personnel will presume that an unconscious person has
given them consent to save his or her life. But even when a rider has
a close family member who can legally take over subsequent medical
decisions (as far as the hospital's lawyers are concerned), your
fellow LSL members may still be uncertain about which family member
should be given your valuables, your keys, your jewelry, and access to
your home -- especially if the family members argue about it when they
get together to meet the witnesses and pick these items up.
It is
unfortunately only a cheerful fiction that all of a downed rider's
brothers and sisters and in-laws will be getting along splendidly the
week that an accident happens -- not to mention the new lover and the
ex-spouse. Would you want your cousin who's on parole rummaging
through your mail while you're laid up? If you have no skeletons in
your closet of relatives, you can ignore these suggestions. But for
many of us, there are some troublesome realities among our relatives.
So, for the longer term...
Have a durable Power of Attorney prepared appointing someone close
to you to be in charge of your business and legal affairs, in
writing. "Durable" means the person designated can act for
you even if you could not act for yourself (i.e., if you were
unconscious, or sedated for a long time). This is not a
"form" document that you can buy, but it is usually
inexpensive to have it prepared. "Close" means living in
your area as well as close by relationship: if someone is making
decisions critical to your well-being, he or she will be better
informed after talking to your doctors face to face, if possible.
If you have given someone verbal authority to act for you in an
emergency, do not leave written authority appointing someone else.
Revoke conflicting Powers of Attorney and have a correct one
prepared. Then tell someone who rides with you whom you designated!
If you don't want to discuss this every time you go out, put a copy
of the durable Power of Attorney with the list of phone numbers on
your bike, or leave it with someone who is on that list of persons
to notify in case of an accident.
If
you're riding with someone who goes down and are helping at an
accident scene, get the name of the investigating officer in charge
and find out where the vehicles are going and where the accident
report will be. Take photos if you can. Retrieve the rider's ID,
insurance card and personal items from the bike and protect them. Find
the lists of phone numbers and medications as soon as possible.
Riders
who witness a serious accident will be somewhat in shock even if they
were uninjured. If you are managing an accident scene where a friend
has been hurt, let bystanders help you as well as your friend, if they
can. Don't rush to get to the hospital once your injured friend has
been removed. Take time to collect yourself before riding again. Have
a drink of water (shock can make you dry-mouthed), and try to remember
to thank the emergency personnel and any bystanders who helped you,
before you leave.
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