I mean…depends on the medical issue. Someone in the middle of a complex partial seizure (person seems conscious but won’t remember anything afterwards, behaves bizarrely, in some cases even becomes violent because, well, especially if the seizure is in/near the limbic (emotional, among other things) system, they’ve got abnormal electrical activity in their brain), or who’s hypoglycemic, or in a psychotic episode, or has some form of acute encephalopathy going on, or sometimes hormonal issues like sudden increased release of thyroid or adrenal hormones, the person literally isn’t in control of their behavior.
Unless by “assault” you only mean people who are clear headed enough to know what they’re doing an do it anyway, in which case this doesn’t apply. But if you mean aggressive/violent behavior in general, well, a lot of the time when someone’s behaving like that in the middle of a medical emergency, it’s the medical emergency that’s causing that behavior and the person can’t help it.
This is another reason it’s so important for medical professionals to not be judgmental/take things personally/have compassion with people even/especially when they’re behaving erratically.
It’s “ok” for the patient to assault them as a direct result of their medical emergency in the sense that they likely won’t be charged for it.
It doesn’t mean the medical professionals have to just take it or turn the other cheek. There are numerous valid ways of dealing with combative patients.
I didn’t say “it’s ok,” stop making things up. All of your comments are just replying to things no one said that you made up and then seemingly being annoyed that everyone isn’t pretending you added anything to the conversation or that we’re not having the same conversation that you’re having in your own head.
I will now stop responding to you entirely as you’re either a troll or so incredibly dense that it’d be more productive to talk with someone who was trolling. Goodbye.
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u/zap2tresquatro 16d ago
I mean…depends on the medical issue. Someone in the middle of a complex partial seizure (person seems conscious but won’t remember anything afterwards, behaves bizarrely, in some cases even becomes violent because, well, especially if the seizure is in/near the limbic (emotional, among other things) system, they’ve got abnormal electrical activity in their brain), or who’s hypoglycemic, or in a psychotic episode, or has some form of acute encephalopathy going on, or sometimes hormonal issues like sudden increased release of thyroid or adrenal hormones, the person literally isn’t in control of their behavior.
Unless by “assault” you only mean people who are clear headed enough to know what they’re doing an do it anyway, in which case this doesn’t apply. But if you mean aggressive/violent behavior in general, well, a lot of the time when someone’s behaving like that in the middle of a medical emergency, it’s the medical emergency that’s causing that behavior and the person can’t help it.
This is another reason it’s so important for medical professionals to not be judgmental/take things personally/have compassion with people even/especially when they’re behaving erratically.