munudeges wrote:Hmmmmm.
What surprised me looking back on the press conference was the way they described how Schumacher had been brought in, in a distressed state. If they were describing the way he was brought into Grenoble when he was transferred then that is not right and I'm afraid the outcome here does not look good. He should have been in an induced coma for the flight when he got there.
That would depend on the facilities at the other hospital. Granted I would have thought a med-evac helicopter would carry a doctor skilled in carrying and rapid-sequence-induction (RSI) in the field, but maybe their standards are different from the UK...and actually not all helimeds in the UK carry them as standard all the time.
Without the right skill-set there, they might not have been able to put him into a coma straight away. Also it would depend a great deal on how he actually presented. If he was fully lucid and showing no signs of a serious (or not so serious) head injury then there would be little reason to immediately carry out an RSI since that procedure carries its own set of risks.
Without all the facts, which tbh we're kind of unlikely to get, it's best not to judge the care he was given. Let us all just be glad that assistance arrived so quickly and that he is now getting the best care available.
All the while I can't help but think of both Richard Hammond and Felipe Massa and hope that Schumi's outcome is as good as theirs were.