90 year-old non-verbal demented male, skilled nursing facility, called for hypotension. Staff report rectal bleeding for several days, they want him to go to the family's community hospital of choice (daughter is onscene, even at 3am). Their last BP was in the 80's.
As per habit, my Basic partner took vitals while I set up the monitor and questioned the staff. He comes up with something like 70/30, and about that time I notice something hinky in leads II/II/AVf. Decided to run the 12-lead, comes back with significant elevations in II/III/AVf/V5/V6 with reciprocal changes.
"Sorry, he can't go to _______ Hospital. He might have the GI bleed but it's not the biggest problem right now."
Cath lab facility 1.25 miles up the road is diverting, so it's off for the 2-mile trip to the trauma center (community hospital is about 5 miles away). Zero IV access due to overall vein condition and arm flexion, patient is a G-tube feed so ASA is out.
Come to find out he'd had an MI 12 weeks prior that nobody deemed important enough to tell me about. When we left they were discussing medical treatment as opposed to catheterization due to his age and overall condition, which the daughter seemed comfortable with.