This is a Test
This is a Test
The most lawyer friendly answer is probably C.
I am not a doctor, but I do know how to handle firearms, so I would also unload and ensure that the gun is not in a condition to fire. This would probably dock me points for diluting potential evidence or some such horseshit, but it’d still be the right thing to do. Provided you knew what you were doing.
It’s not difficult.
A is wrong because whoever wrote this is in no position to evaluate if the person reading it is capable of “to check if the gun is loaded” without blowing their own head off.
D is wrong because the person whoever wrote this is in no position to evaluate if the person reading it is capable of “hold the gun personally” without blowing their own head off.
C is the only correct answer.
Unless you pass by a “good person with a gun” seeing you with a gun and killing you because you’re carrying a gun on the way.
The only answer is to leave the gun where it is without touching it, exit the room with the patient, lock the door from outside, leave the building yourself, light a cigarette, forget about whatever the problem was, go home, because they aren’t paying you enough to get shot on your job
because they aren’t paying you enough to get shot on your job
If you’re a surgeon, they might be
Tbf if nobody in the room has experience handling them, it’d be better to tell a nurse to grab the security guard or something than to handle it at all.
That said, if there’s a possibility one may be in this situation they should take the 5 whole minutes to learn one day, as the actual safest option is to A) know what you’re doing and clear it or B) don’t even touch it until someone does clear it, though this could impact medical care or the speed with which it is delivered.