Wicked Training [T]
Feb 5, 2017 10:01:57 GMT -7
Post by Chizuru on Feb 5, 2017 10:01:57 GMT -7
First Aid: Healing
Rank: "E" (5 Training Points at all Times)
Skill: Skill
Effect: This skill allows a character to properly tend to the sick and injured.
Special: ---
Drawback: ---
Description: While some basic medical knowledge is inherent in this skill (to the extent such can be said to exist), the character’s role is to provide an optimal environment to facilitate the patient’s own recuperative abilities, by monitoring the patient and tending to his needs as required.
Novice: Diagnose; Tend to injured characters such that their wounds heal at a faster rate; critical care requires 10 minutes/wound; can distinguish whether an individual is dead or merely unconscious.
Average: Stabilize a character knocked unconscious from trauma; critical care requires 6 minutes/wound; with a successful Average skill check to resuscitate a dying character.
Advanced: Function as a midwife to deliver children; diagnose injuries; critical care requires 4 minutes/wound
Expert: Properly set broken bones; amputate limbs; critical care requires 3 minutes/wound
Master: Critical care needs 2 min. per wound
Look in Task Skills thread found in the Skills and Traits Index for more information. Each time learned user gets 1 die roll to increase the skill.
Limit: ---
Rank: "E" (5 Training Points at all Times)
Skill: Skill
Effect: This skill allows a character to properly tend to the sick and injured.
Special: ---
Drawback: ---
Description: While some basic medical knowledge is inherent in this skill (to the extent such can be said to exist), the character’s role is to provide an optimal environment to facilitate the patient’s own recuperative abilities, by monitoring the patient and tending to his needs as required.
Novice: Diagnose; Tend to injured characters such that their wounds heal at a faster rate; critical care requires 10 minutes/wound; can distinguish whether an individual is dead or merely unconscious.
Average: Stabilize a character knocked unconscious from trauma; critical care requires 6 minutes/wound; with a successful Average skill check to resuscitate a dying character.
Advanced: Function as a midwife to deliver children; diagnose injuries; critical care requires 4 minutes/wound
Expert: Properly set broken bones; amputate limbs; critical care requires 3 minutes/wound
Master: Critical care needs 2 min. per wound
Look in Task Skills thread found in the Skills and Traits Index for more information. Each time learned user gets 1 die roll to increase the skill.
Limit: ---
I walked through the land with an intent and found a perfect candidate to aid me in my endeavors. A man came into my field of view and I confronted him about aiding me in a small task, and perhaps it was the provocative nature of my buttons but he agreed quite readily. I knocked his head to drop his consciousness and stabbed him afterwards. "Alright Lasciel, it is time to get to work and earn your keep in my head." The figure of the blonde woman in a toga appeared before me and spoke, 'As if my assistance is needed for you to know how to sew up a paltry wound like this.' With a sigh and roll of my eyes I took out my sewing kit and began to work, it would take time but it was not impossible. First I grabbed some of the small towels at my disposal and began to put pressure on the wound to slow the bleeding, I could not work if it continued at the rate it was.
Whilst using one hand to contain and constrict the flow of blood my other moved to grab a small bottle of disinfectant which I had brought with me. After several minutes when I felt the blood had slowed enough for me to work I soaked another small cloth in the disinfectant and removed the constricting towel and proceeded to clean the wound. Once satisfied I took a needle from my kit and my Y'la chimed in, 'No, no, that shall not do mine host. You must use a curved needle when stitching flesh together.' Such words made sense so I rooted about the small first aid kit I had obtained and threaded the needle with what was provided. Carefully I began to stitch through the flesh of the man I had wounded, tying off the thread after each stitch rather than continuing as if working upon cloth.
With the occasional tip from my Y'la Lasciel I worked upon the man and once the final stitch was completed I wiped the wound gently with the disinfected cloth and began to inspect the treated wound. My belief was that it was not terrible, but a voice in my ear criticized the work I had put in. 'Such a sloppy execution, the stitching is a bit haphazard, but it shall do for now. Cover the wound and make sure the gauze remains in place firmly.' Shooting a sidelong glance at the image I began to do just that and placed a gauze pad on the injury and used the medical tape to secure it firmly in place.