Clearly because the newer shows aren't True Star Trek.
Clearly because the newer shows aren't True Star Trek.
Sorry, I know a full time nurse takes YEARS of school, even a EMT. Or Fireman requires YEARS of training to get good enough to treat people. No disrespect intended.I'm so sick of disrespectful posts like this. I'm a nurse, I trained for years to become one, then even more to become a specialized nurse, I keep taking courses every year to keep my knowledge up to date but apparently none of that is important because everyone can be a nurse.
A botanist has no qualifications to work as a nurse, none! And the only reason you suggested it is because you have no idea what a nurse actually does but assume it can't be particularly hard, do you have any idea how offensive that is?
Absolutely. It wasn't until I watched one of these virtual tours where I realised the scale of the D and the facilities that it would have onboard. The main shuttlebay is like an airport.There are deck plans of the E-D that show a huge medical complex with surgical suites, physiotherapy rooms, a large recovery ward, and various other features, so the room we see in each series is likely just a ward that serves as the CMO's clinic (given their office is always attached to it). DS9's infirmary really is more of a doctor's office up front and a dedicated ward in the rear (though I suspect it too likely has other facilities)..
I thought you were just alluding to how Tom Paris was a pilot but also Voyager's backup nurse in the early seasons and so they might have trained up other people to be backups when he couldn't be there or after Kes left the ship.Sorry, I know a full time nurse takes YEARS of school, even a EMT. Or Fireman requires YEARS of training to get good enough to treat people. No disrespect intended.
Which is the problem with trek in that reguard, in that a number of the shows had a dismal showing in that there was only 1 or a few to treat a whole crew.
What i meant is something along the lines of corpsman where a person is trained in a number of specialties where there main thing is botany or some other specialty, but there secondary is medical training. Be it emergency/red alert station or in medical helping out when needed.
They wouldn't be in the Sick bay treating the hard cases. Theyd be the ones running the gurnies, running the medical tricorders and depending light medical like analgesics, pain medicine, staunch blood etc. Which is only a modicum of training compared to full nurse. And they'd take shifts in Sick bay to continue training.
I apologize if you thought I was trivializing nurses snd there training.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.