THere's also no reason to over-react, based on a stable clinical presentation because something MIGHT happen (or might not).
Its clear you guys have two different philosophies in management. Neither is necessarily wrong. I prefer to treat the patient, not the lawyers.... your mileage may vary.
Emergency care providers are confronted with that kind of dilemma on a daily basis.
Most of the time, your patients are stable, you do not need to intervene ( except maybe for O2, IV access and monitoring )...
There are times however, when you need to draw the big guns and provide aggressive care without delay in order to save somebody's life ( cardiac arrest, fulminant pulmonary edema, tension pneumothorax, etc )...
It's up to the caregiver ( based on his training, experience and clinical judgment ) to decide when the patient is stable and when he is not.
Medical emergencies are fairly common aboard airliners, if you had to divert every time somebody is ill and MIGHT require intensive care, airlines would lose many millions of dollars on a monthly basis...that's one of the reasons they're working with organizations like Medlink...
Anyone else read that article and think the lady is faking it? She gets on the plane and makes a big scene about how allergic she is and then, sure enough, she has an allergic reaction with out eating the shrimp. The doctor describes what the patient is complaining about, but her vital signs are normal.
I'm no doctor, and maybe too cynical, but my gut is telling me this lady is just looking for a lawsuit.
I tend to agree that in the mentioned case, the woman was hysterical and very apprehensive because she thought she MIGHT experience a severe allergic reaction...hard to say, I wasn't there...
There are so many clinical presentations, it's hard to generalize....but, just to give an example, I would not hesitate to ask for a diversion when treating a patient with a suspected acute MI ( it would be foolish to delay thrombolytic therapy or risk cardiogenic shock / dysrhythmias )