cherryblossom
VIP Member
Dailymail said:£500,000 payout for museum boss over mental trauma of paramedics arriving 17 minutes late when she dislocated knee on the bus home
Dailymail said:Paramedics arrived 17 minutes late to treat her leg, and Mrs Leigh developed post-traumatic stress disorder as a result
I literally stumbled across this on facebook, and couldn't quite believe it.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...17-minutes-late-dislocated-knee-bus-home.html
Am I missing something obvious? How was this woman even diagnosed with PTSD? How does her situation fit with Criterion A?
Criterion A outlines events that are considered traumatic enough for a PTSD diagnosis, which include but not limited to, war as a combatant or civilian, threatened or actual physical assault (robbery, mugging, physical attack, childhood physical abuse), threatened or actual sexual violation (forced sexual penetration, alcohol / drug-facilitated sexual penetration, abusive sexual contact, noncontact sexual abuse, sexual trafficking), being kidnapped, taken hostage, terrorist attack, torture, prisoner of war, natural or man-made disasters, medical (waking during surgery, anaphylactic shock) and severe motor vehicle accidents.
Whilst every conceivable type of trauma is impossible to list, the DSM clearly outlines a pervasive pattern of extreme violence or abnormal event not considered normal within life. Normal death, life threatening illness, debilitating medical illness, relationship breakdowns and other stressors considered part of normal life, are not necessarily considered a traumatic event by definition for PTSD. These lesser events are covered under other diagnoses, such as Adjustment Disorders, where a single stressor is responsible.
I also don't understand how an ambulance can arrive 17 minutes late. Having worked as a paramedic in the UK for 17 years, I really don't understand what they mean by 'late'. Did she pre-book an ambulance? Yes, the ambulance service has targets, and all calls are categorised and responded to according to priority. I also know that people often wait longer than they would like, but isn't the ambulance service in place for life threatening emergencies. A dislocated knee would surely be a very low priory compared to someone having a heart attack or a stroke, or a child choking. I really don't understand how they define 'late'.
I'm just curious if anyone has any thoughts on this.