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gregnavis | 4 years ago
- He was a water spider in an Amazon warehouse.
- On 5 Sep, 2021 he asked his team lead to assign extra help because he and his colleagues couldn't keep up with the amount of work. An argument between them ensued but some help was assigned at the end of the day.
- In the morning of 6 Sep, 2021 he felt stabbing in his chest and had difficulties breathing. He asked the team lead to call a medic (there were medical care worked employed by Amazon) but he refused and offered to walk him to the medic instead.
- He passed out on his way to the medic and never regained consciousness.
- An investigation was opened on 7 Sep, 2021.
fhaldridge7|4 years ago
okl|4 years ago
https://www.shmula.com/what-is-the-role-of-the-waterspider-i...
lqet|4 years ago
https://www.flexpipeinc.com/ca_en/role_of_waterspider/
> Water spider is a term that refers to a specific person whose main job is to take care of intermittent tasks such as supplying material at workstations.
grn|4 years ago
> A water spider is a Lean production personnel role centered around timely and accurate stock replenishment. The water spider team member is similar to a mobile Kanban system that refills the production line with the required materials to maintain a steady flow.
jes|4 years ago
GaryTang|4 years ago
londons_explore|4 years ago
This is the step that most people would point out as the main 'mistake'. However, a medic without his equipment isn't a lot of use, and it's pretty likely the facility had a medical bay. For a patient who can walk, taking them to the medical bay will probably lead to better care quicker than calling the medic out. Walking there with someone is a very sensible precaution.
Imagine the reverse... Medic called to employee. Medic doesn't have defibrillator in equipment bag (it's filled with stuff for more common accidents). Employee dies because now the medic has to make the journey from the medical bay to the employee four times, taking far too long.
carbocation|4 years ago
The description given above is likely a myocardial infarction or an aortic dissection.
If you are having chest pain, you should minimize myocardial demand. Sit down. Call emergency services.
Do not exert yourself by walking. That is a recipe for sudden cardiac death.
meheleventyone|4 years ago
Edit: To add I had one in May despite being fit, young-ish and with no cardio-vascular problems. It came on whilst swimming and I foolishly carried on through it, got dressed and walked home, lay down for a bit before I got my wife to take me to the emergency room where they did approximately 4 seconds of EKG before stuffing me full of drugs and rushing me to surgery via an ambulance. For an idea of the level of potential for dying the ambulance came with a doctor as well as paramedics.
hnbad|4 years ago
In Germany defibrillators are openly available in most public buildings and I think any industrial setting has to have them easily accessible too. They're as idiot proof as it gets: you push a big button and follow the instructions (automated voice commands, but I think there is also a text display as backup).
I don't know what the laws are like in Poland but all I'm saying is that this scenario you propose could easily be solved with basic health and safety regulations.
You're also ignoring that they could have called the medic while also moving him in the direction of the medical facility, assuming the movement didn't contribute to his death. Not to mention that a trained emergency medic should know what equipment to bring based on reported symptoms.
yardie|4 years ago
jo6gwb|4 years ago
Randosaurus|4 years ago
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