Doggtyred
En-Route
Are you sure there are no toxicology reports at the hospital? Drawing levels would be pretty standard in such a situation.
Wells
Actually, you might be surprised that its NO LONGER the standard for many physicians. Your alcohol level really doesn't drive most aspects of your medical care inside the hospital.
If the cop has a basis to have your alcohol level drawn, he has to make his case and get a warrant with probable cause, then have a compulsory draw performed. In certain LIMITED circumstances it can be done without a warrant (such as if the suspect was involved in an accident that killed someone or caused a serious injury that may result in a fatality in short order)...
But.. if the ER doc draws an alcohol level, and that draw is not medically indicated, then you have a data point floating around in your chart that can be very easily subpoenaed after the fact, using evidence for probable cause that may not have been apparent in the immediate aftermath of the incident.
So then the doc and hospital can incur civil liability for drawing the sample in the first place, and it gets really uncomfortable in a deposition when the patient's attorney wants you to explain how having that data point made any difference at all in your treatment and outcome... when that data point has perhaps resulted in the patient's loss of income, licensure, etc.. Docs dont like getting sued (even though it happens) and they REALLY dont like getting sued when its hard to win.
So.. the point I'm trying to make is that some ER docs and some hospital systems have run this past their legal counsel, and they no longer routinely draw serum ethanol levels on MVA patients unless there is a clear, overriding need to do so. Over the years I've worked with docs who do, and docs who dont.
My philosophy is, let the cop do his job and let me do mine. If the cop has an overwhelming cause to pull a specimen, he will provide the paperwork AND the tube for the specimen, and he will send it to the law enforcement's reference lab. Cuts the hospital, doc and phlebotomist out of the equation altogether.