Carly dies because Robyn (the head of triage) makes the wrong decision. Instead of putting Carly on a stretcher and taking her to the ambulance Robyn decides to take another passenger who had a red tag (which means move this victim as fast as you can to the ambulance)to the ambulance. She leaves Carly with Heidi who eventually leaves Carly because Mr.Farquhar (Partrick's father and head of the fire fighters) needs a key to open a fealthy barn for body bags. She then helps Teddie (a 5 year old girl who has a bone sticking out her leg) and when finished with Teddie goes back to Carly to find that she isn't where she was a few minutes ago and starts to be relieved because Heidi thinks that Carly has been put on a stretcher to an ambulance. So she goes to help the Attendants people in the fealthy barn to help with the body bags and soon founds that she was wrong. Carly didn't get to an ambulance she lost her pulse.
cant say what it means in the book but the term 'golden hour' in real life refers to the hour immediately after a potentially fatal injury has happened. Its often the case that if the injured person can get medical treatment within the first hour then he has a good chance of surviving. however if he cant get treatment within that hour his chances of surviving become very much diminished as his injuries may become beyond treatment after that time has past. (statistically speaking, but each case is different of course).
The address of the Convoy Branch is: 116 E. Tully St., Convoy, 45832 9999
A question on my Engrd 116 homework!
This is a phrase taken from Shakespeare's Sonnet 116. The term "bark" refers to a sea-vessel, a ship. The star to which this phrase refers is the "North Star", the star by which sailors would orient themselves in lieu of a compass. Therefore, the phrase is speaking of something that is true, constant, and ever-dependable in the midst of struggle or confusion in life. In Shakespeare's Sonnet 116, this constant he is referring to is Love.
The line "Love's not Time's fool" is from Shakespeare's sonnet #116. The meaning of the quotation hinges on the meaning of the word "fool". This word had a number of meanings to Shakespeare including a stupid person, a professional jester or comic and a child. The meaning here is the same as in the line from Romeo and Juliet, "O, I am Fortune's Fool!", where fool means a dupe, a gull, a slave or lackey. In the sonnet, Time and Love are personified, but Love, says Shakespeare, is not the lackey or servant of Time, so that whether we love or not can be controlled by the passage of time. The theme of the sonnet as a whole is that true love withstands time; it is eternal and unchanging.
Betsey is the flight attendant of the plane #116
No, Patrick is not the main character in the book "Flight #116 Is Down." The main character is Heidi, a teenage volunteer at a hospital who finds herself involved in the aftermath of a plane crash.
there is a huge planecrash and patrick and Heidi save everybody that needs it.
he directs the traffic so the rescue workers can get in, and the ambulances can get out
In the book "116 is Going Down," Betsy was injured in the plane crash but survived. She sustained some injuries but was able to make it out alive.
The falling action in "Flight 116 is Down" occurs as the survivors of the crash come together to care for the injured, assess the situation, and formulate a plan for rescue. This phase typically follows the climax and sets the stage for the resolution of the story.
Dancing Barefoot - book - has 116 pages.
Two (as of 'September 2012).STS-116 - First flight - Discovery.STS-117 - Second Flight - Atlantis.
The book "Sounder" by William H. Armstrong has 116 pages.
its about a plane that crash behind Heidi backyard of the dove house and there were many accidents there were teenage kids that were trained for this but didn't have any experienced and they try to help as many as they can before the plane explodes.
That's easy. Geography Land Book 2
116 pages of reading.