this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2024
159 points (98.2% liked)
Roadcam
293 readers
1 users here now
Your Road-side Entertainment
Most content is allowed as long as it pertains to methods of transport on a road (cars, bikes, etc). This includes videos, images, compilations, and more.
Rules:
- English titles only.¹
- Posts must be related to vehicles or roads.
- All posts should be "raw footage" and not "produced". This means no video essays.
- No graphic gore or death ("NSFL").²
- All Lemmy.ca rules apply and will be actively enforced.
If you have an original source or know the location, please share!
¹ Comments can be any language.
² Non-graphic injuries and death are allowed. This may be revised later.
Have feedback?
If you find certain link sources annoying, titles ugly or frustrating, or have a rule suggestion, feel free to make a [Discussion] post about it.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Former EMT here: I ran more diabetic / hypoglycemia car crash calls than drunk driving calls. Really confused me
They took too much insulin to become hypoglycemic?
Huh? That's one possible way to become hypoglycemic, but certainly not the most common, in my limited professional experience.
Oh ok, what are the other ways, what is the most common way?
I'm not diabetic, so I am relation my perspective as a former EMT:
The most common I experienced was folks not managing their daily diet perfectly. It can happen that they miss a meal or whatever, and "forget". Then, while driving, the impacts of becoming hypoglycemic hit. Since they "forgot", the onset of symptoms is unexpected. If it hits fast enough they don't have time to realize what's happening, and go from a competent driver to a "drunk", with reduced mentation, focus, dexterity, etc. They can even pass out.