Professor bobmarley
Forced Fed Marmite by WhoisDan
- Location
- Oxfordshire/Preston
I've been a medic since the 11th of May 2015 I have been an MTO and a GP in that time. I have to admit I preferred the NHS between when I first joined the NHS and first two months as GP, as it was a lot more relaxed and simple. In my opinion the NHS has become somewhat complicated and tried to be like the police instead of being itself. The biggest example is that now you have to fill in time sheets for taking things out like the hatchback sport and even students if you're an MTO. We had patrol time sheets in RTU but they were removed by Bee as most of the officers in RTU didn't like them.
In the argument that it was a reactive to a medics breaking rules, most cases where students go out on patrol on their own it's normally due to a misunderstanding or not knowing it's against medic rules, very rarely is it that they do it despite knowing it's against medic rules. When I saw medics doing something wrong which was normally for things like reviving without role play (Which in my opinion is the worst thing a medic can do) or borderline combat reviving ect, I would ask if I could talk to them privately, and explain where they went wrong and what to do next time. These medics often went on to get a lot of recommendations and went on to be MTO's. At one point which I mentioned a lot while I was a GP that it seemed that punishments for NHS rule breaking outweigh rewarding the medics for good deeds.
Thank you for reading,
bobmarley
In the argument that it was a reactive to a medics breaking rules, most cases where students go out on patrol on their own it's normally due to a misunderstanding or not knowing it's against medic rules, very rarely is it that they do it despite knowing it's against medic rules. When I saw medics doing something wrong which was normally for things like reviving without role play (Which in my opinion is the worst thing a medic can do) or borderline combat reviving ect, I would ask if I could talk to them privately, and explain where they went wrong and what to do next time. These medics often went on to get a lot of recommendations and went on to be MTO's. At one point which I mentioned a lot while I was a GP that it seemed that punishments for NHS rule breaking outweigh rewarding the medics for good deeds.
Thank you for reading,
bobmarley