Medical Policy

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Introduction

This policy serves to outline the OOC rules governing how you play medical roles on-station. The goal of this policy is to help set a basic minimum of conduct extending from the main server principles specific to how you play in medical as a department. If interested in an in-character set of guidelines and considerations for positioning yourself in roleplay, instead refer to the Medical SOP - this policy is for administrative enforcement.

Basic Requirements

As a player, playing medical has the following requirements:

  • Make at least some good-faith effort to play the role you signed up for when called upon if you aren’t taking on another role in the round. Otherwise, don’t take it.
  • Don’t go out of your way to subvert other players’ ability to play the game in the roles they’ve chosen without first having given them a chance to play those roles.
  • Comply with the basic standards for medical play laid out in this policy.

Bad-faith failure to meet these requirements in a way violates the broader server principles may not only invite IC consequences but administrative action as well.

Your exemption from these requirements extends as far as whatever you are doing is judged to be more broadly consistent with the server’s greater guiding principles.

Specific Roles

Specific jobs within the medical department have specific, interlocking responsibilities and rules which apply.

Chief Medical Officer

Virologist

  • Only produce and release viruses according to the rules on Virology.

Departmental Guards (Orderly)

Medical Cyborg

  • As a Silicon: follow requirements for your behavior under standard and non-standard lawsets laid out in Silicon policy.

Specific Rules

Medical has specific rules around procedures that must be followed only around these areas listed below. These govern:

Medical Sites, Surgery, and Revival

This applies to all roles in the medical department including cyborgs.

Rule Dropdown
Medical sites are defined as,

“Approved or pre-built spaces and facilities for providing medical care."

  • These spaces and facilities must be approved by the Chief Medical Officer if not pre-mapped-in.
  • Alterations to pre-built spaces and facilities must be approved by the Chief Medical Officer and should not be carried out without approval.
  • This applies only to functional alterations meaning those which alter in some way the performance of medical work (i.e. adding/removing beds and computers.)
  • In the instance of people joining the round late: the Chief Medical Officer's OOC power to approve alterations and sites only applies over those which did not have previous approval.
If not in medical, a medical site, or an absolute emergency where necessary to avert greater harm, you are not allowed to perform surgeries besides Tend Wounds.

In medical or a medical site, surgery must first be deferred to Medical Doctors with adequate opportunity given for them to respond and attend to the surgery.

  • If not a medical doctor or acting as a medical doctor as a cyborg/CMO, this is to say you must make a good-faith effort to loop in a doctor to perform any surgery in medical before doing it yourself and let them do it if they come forward.
Revival may only take place outside of medical or a medical site under emergency conditions where transport to medical or a medical site is infeasible because they
  • A) cannot be safely accessed for revival or
  • B) cannot be transported to without undue risk of total loss of the patient

In medical or a medical site, revivals must first be deferred to Medical Doctors with adequate opportunity given for them to respond and attend to the revival.

  • If not a medical doctor or acting as a medical doctor as a cyborg/CMO, this is to say you must make a good-faith effort to loop in a doctor to perform any revival in medical before doing it yourself and let them do it if they come forward - unless it’s an absolute emergency, get them to medical and get a doctor.

Virology

This applies to anyone engaging with virology.

Rule Dropdown
Except with admin permission, only beneficial viruses may be produced and intentionally released. Consult the Guide to Virology before any engagement with this content.
Non-contagious viruses (those with the ‘blood’ vector and no contagious symptoms like coughing/sneezing) should be looked at by at least one other person in medical (ideally the CMO or, in their absence, a virology-competent MD) or someone else familiar enough to evaluate them before release.

They should also be clearly-labeled (ex. with symptoms, cures, and slime-safeness.)

Airborne/touch-spread viruses are allowed, but they may only be released only under the following conditions.
  • Only the Chief Medical Officer, Captain, or Acting Captain may approve the release of a contagious healing virus. You must secure and keep their approval before releasing it.
    • Ideally, you will have gotten their approval before starting any development of a contagious virus so as to save time if they say ‘no’ which they may do at any point.
  • The virus must be of at least one of these two categories.
    • The first category is a healing virus created with symptoms that are capable of healing or helping whoever catches them.
    • The second category is a blocker virus or one with high resistance and meant to function as a shield against other harmful advanced viruses.
  • Viruses of these types must have no active negative, harmful, or disruptive symptoms.
    • While on-balance a virus with self-respiration and coughing might spread better and heal more than it hurts, coughing is negative (causes people to drop things,) harmful with high stats (causing damage/knockback,) and obnoxious. If you put negative symptoms on a contagious virus to increase its stats, they must be neutered/inactive.
  • For healing viruses, they must also be 'slime-safe;' contagious healing viruses may not have active symptoms that heal toxin damage.
    • Symptoms that do this currently include plasma fixation, starlight condensation, and radioactive resonance. These will kill a slimeperson if activated and so must not be released.
  • The virus must be announced to the crew ahead of release.
    • Ideally, the cure or a vaccine for the virus is available inside the front fridge of Medical if it is possible (or safe - some viruses have harmful cures,) but this is not a hard requirement; there are arguments both for and against it.
  • The Chief Medical Officer, Captain, or Acting Captain must inspect the virus before release to ensure that all the above conditions are met.
    • Ideally this person will also make the announcement; they take responsibility with you for any issues that arise.

You may not produce or release contagious viruses without meeting these criteria.

Good Faith Protection for Suicide, Mental Health, and Trauma RP

This applies to anyone finding themselves in these situations; but has particular bearing on medical and medical-adjacent roles such as the Psychologist due to their in-character nature.

Rule Dropdown
It will not be considered in bad faith for you to disengage from roleplaying around content or situations with which you are not personally comfortable or capable of engaging with while still enjoying the game.

This is to say that nobody should say to you that you are obliged to proceed or engage with this content because you had previously done so or because of the role you picked.

Medical and medical-adjacent roles put players in positions to encounter many problems portrayed in roleplaying which have sensitive real-life analogues; not-infrequent examples include

  • suicide, self-harm, and ideation;
  • mental health crises, severe mental illness, and substance abuse;
  • abusive relationships, trauma, and loss.

This does not imply that others have a responsibility to not roleplay out this content; this is strictly a protection for you in choosing to disengage from it.

This extends from server rule #11 and the broader Skyrat server principles, particularly the first: be considerate of others.

You have worse and better ways to disengage from content if you find yourself in such a position; LOOC is perhaps your immediate best tool as being considerate of others admits of the possibility that they do not know your limits or boundaries about the content with which they might present.

Blackout Policy

This applies to all players. In medical in particular, you must be familiar with and abide by this rule - remind people on revival that these are the limits of their knowledge after death.

Rule Dropdown
Upon death you do not remember anything that has lead up to it, the person who killed you or where it happened. You still remember what happened throughout the rest of the round but anything close to your death is faint at best and unreliable.

Blackout applies to cyborgs as well, you will not remember the above mentioned if you are killed or your chassis destroyed. To note, being deconstructed while functional does not trigger the blackout and you will still keep the memories.

Additional Notes

An unofficial set of IC guidelines and Standard Operating Procedures exists to help inform role-playing in and around medical. These are not binding and should be considered optional supplemental material.


Last updated 04/12/2023 - policy editor Higgin#2299

Skyrat policies