#21
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ID for Riding
"Peter Cole" wrote: Make sure you buy 2 so they can stuff one into your lifeless mouth. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ When I was in the Army, we wore two dog tags. It was my understanding that if someone died in combat, they would collect one dog tag for the records, and leave one with the body for identification. See if you can mae a joke out of that! |
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#22
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ID for Riding
On 2009-05-28, Leo Lichtman wrote:
"Peter Cole" wrote: Make sure you buy 2 so they can stuff one into your lifeless mouth. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ When I was in the Army, we wore two dog tags. It was my understanding that if someone died in combat, they would collect one dog tag for the records, and leave one with the body for identification. See if you can mae a joke out of that! Isn't that what he just did, or at least attempted? -- -John ) |
#23
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ID for Riding
Joy Beeson wrote:
On Fri, 22 May 2009 05:32:33 +0000 (UTC), wrote: Comments on whether they seem to be worth the money? A label stuck inside the helmet costs practically nothing, and doesn't irritate your wrist. I'll post another vote for Road ID. You can hang it on your seatpost or just about anywhere else on your bike because it has a velcro strip. You don't have to wear it if you don't want to, though I usually do. |
#24
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ID for Riding
On May 25, 1:24 am, wrote:
John Thompson wrote: On 2009-05-23, Leo Lichtman wrote: But then you need a bracelet with a message telling the ambulance crew (or whoever) to look in your helmet. :-) I suspect if you're unconcious, no emergency crew is going to take your helmet off until after you've gotten to the emergency room and your C-spine x-ray is cleared. A lot of people with medical problems wear medical ID bracelets, so that if they're unconscious, emergency crews will know about their diabetes, allergies, or whatever. I think that checking for a bracelet is SOP for emergency responders. You could put all kinds of info on a Road ID, including DL#, phone numbers, and medical info as well. Road ID allows (I think) four lines of info. You can even include a link (extra charge) where you can send the responders for more current and complete info. Maybe I'll ask for one of those for Father's Day... Bill (Frumious) __o | Fear not the path of truth for the lack _`\(,_ | of people walking on it. (_)/ (_) | --Robert F. Kennedy Reply: I carry a wrist, road I.D. and it makes me feel much more comfortable knowing that it's one of the first places a medic is looking to either take a pulse of hook-up up an I.V. It can't be missed. Name, address, emergency contact, allergies, blood type, are all on there; everything they need to know to begin assistance immediately. And the helmet I.D. doesn't work in the real world of the medic. When the helmet finally does get taken off (after X-rays, CAT scan, etc, it's tossed and no one looks inside. |
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