Hedford's complaints make it pretty clear there was nobody there to give her the shots when they were needed, so McCoy clearly arrives later than she does. Possibly in response to her cries for help, but perhaps not, as no such cries are mentioned. Whether the situation is simple medevac or not is for us to decide: Kirk not only promises medical help, but also the returning of the Commissioner to her job, supposedy at Gamma Canaris III, and might have arrived to bolster UFP diplomatic efforts in the first place, the medevac scenario only arising later on.
No, McCoy can treat her if she starts to show symptoms en route to the ship. You don't not send along a doctor when you go to pick up someone who's sick, if there's a choice and you have a doctor to spare.Inoculations as Hedford stated were supposed to be done prior to her arriving at Epsilon Canaris 3 so sending McCoy after the fact where he couldn't do anything to help her does not make sense, IMHO.
No, McCoy can treat her if she starts to show symptoms en route to the ship. You don't not send along a doctor when you go to pick up someone who's sick, if there's a choice and you have a doctor to spare.
It's called palliative care. You don't not take a doctor.There doesn't appear to be anything McCoy can do other than give a sedative or pain-reducing injection. The dialogue strongly implies that the only treatment for the disease is the Enterprise's medical facilities and it is fatal very soon.
If Dr McCoy was sent from the Enterprise they would've included equipment or drugs to treat the disease in the shuttle. But if McCoy was already there with Kirk and Spock and Hedford as part of a delegation then it would cover why McCoy is unable to treat Hedford at anytime on the way back to the Enterprise, IMHO.
MCCOY: Jim, we've got to get Miss Hedford to the Enterprise. Her condition.
...
KIRK: I can't quite place him, but. What about Miss Hedford?
MCCOY: No temperature yet, but we've got to get under way soon, Jim. I guarantee you, it will develop. What are we going to do?
...
MCCOY: Temperature, Captain. First sign.
KIRK: Yes, I know. It means we're running out of time.
...
MCCOY: All right. Try to relax. Jim, it's started, the fever. It's over a hundred, and it's climbing.
KIRK: How long do we have?
MCCOY: A matter of hours, that's all.
It's called palliative care. You don't not take a doctor.
@blssdwlf - I was toying with the justification of what if there existed as Standard Operating Proceedure, which assigns the most senior engineer - Scott - to be on shuttlecraft missions where the crew consists of one, or more, senior officers onboard; with the intended purpose to "increase the insurance" of the safety of other senior officers on the mission.
How would it have looked if Spock and McCoy - both senior department heads - died on Taurus II because the engineer assigned to the shuttlecraft party to affect repairs as a mechanic was of Ensign grade?
I'm not going to argue with that. That was lame. They could have had a mini-sickbay on board to start her cure and just have it get shorted out when the Companion captures the shuttle.And if McCoy was sent to help Hedford you don't not take medicine, equipment and additional medical personnel.
@Timo - NANCY: I was sent to Epsilon Canaris III to prevent a war, Doctor. Thanks to the inefficiency of the medical branch of the Starfleet, I've been forced to leave before my job was done. - See EpisodeWe need to give these peace talks some time to reach a stage where Hedford would express frustration at not being able to continue...
@Timo - In the episode, Hedford's character delivers her statement while venomously biting McCoy's head off for having been forced to leave the peace talks before her job is done. - See EpisodeWhich is what I mean: the talks need enough time so that this statement will ring true...
What was always harder to understand was the top-heavy personnel load on the shuttle flight. Surely there are experienced greenshirt lieutenants on Enterprise who could handle this transport duty, but they embark CO and XO both? I suppose it's possible that they were required at some kind of high-level briefing or meeting, but Starfleet seems to be able to handle that thing pretty well with secure communications. If it was protocol related, the CO should be enough, sending the second-in-command doesn't get you extra points.
Back in the sailing navy days when ship's boats were dispatched on independent missions (sometimes quite long distances), they were usually under a midshipman.
I wouldn't quote "The Menagerie" for any shuttle-related data.
1) It's an illusion, like basically everything that happens in the episode. It may just barely exist, and just possibly may have been launched with Kirk alone aboard, but that's about it.
2) Even within the illusion, the rules say Spock wants to get caught, so he's probably dragging his feet - whereas Kirk doesn't have to worry about reaching the ship, since Spock will pick him up anyway when he arranges for himself to get killed.
For all we know, even in a real scenario, a starship would leave SB11 at warp two, which the shuttle could just barely reach at full throttle - and would leave the shuttle in her wake once clearing the shallows.
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