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federal_general_practitioner_of_firetown

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Races | Culture | Buildings & Organizations

FEDERAL GENERAL PRACTITIONER OF FIRETOWN

Overview

The Federal General Practitioner of Firetown is the settlement’s primary point of care, delivering day-to-day medicine, minor emergency response, and preventive programs under the Federal Health Agency (FHEA), within the Federal Health Care System (FHCS). Severe cases are stabilized on site and referred to the Medical Station of New Kourou.

Architectural Significance

  • Construction Materials: Basaltic stone from the Ralar fields with timber lintels; tight mortar joints for wind seal.
  • Floors: 1 (exam wing + treatment bay + dispensary).
  • Design Aesthetic: Dark-Side utilitarian — thick walls, enclosed vestibules, compact plan to conserve heat.
  • Lighting (No Electric High-Bays): Hooded oil lamps and baseboard Luminofera dualis runs; task mirrors over benches; no exterior glazing.
  • Ventilation / Acoustic Control (Passive): Louvered vents with wind baffles; cork panels; no powered HVAC.
  • Energy Use (Low-Draw): Radiant floor loop off district geothermal; kettle sterilizer (geothermal/wood as fallback); hand/foot-powered devices; analog diagnostics.

Building Structure

  • Wind Porch & Reception: Enclosed airlock vestibule; ledger check-in, triage bench, waiting benches; health notices.
  • Triage Alcove: Vitals, dressings, isolation curtain.
  • Consultation Rooms (2): General exams, minor procedures; locked supply cupboards.
  • Treatment / Emergency Bay (1): Stretcher, first-aid and suture kits, splints, manual suction; wall cots.
  • Sterilization Nook: Kettle/autoclave, instrument racks, hand-wash.
  • Pharmacy Dispensary: Script window, secure shelving; FWRS ration ledgers.
  • Records & Staff Room: Paper files, shift ledger, small break table.
  • Restrooms: AuroraSan stalls for patients (2) and one staff W.C.; wash-basins.
  • Service Bay: Covered sledge/wagon pull-in; grit mats; salt/ash bin.

Look and Feel

Basalt walls hold steady warmth from the radiant floors; breath fogs only in the wind porch. Hand-lettered dosage tables and vaccination charts hang along the corridor. Oil lamps and Luminofera bands throw a calm, even light across ledgers, exam cots, and dispensary tins. A foot bellows feeds the sterilizer; a brass bell summons the next patient. Everything is labeled, reachable, and built for cold-country reliability.

Roles and Responsibilities

Staff (≈5)

  • General Practitioner (1): Diagnosis, minor procedures, referrals, public-health oversight.
  • Nurses (2): Triage, dressings, immunizations, night on-call rotation.
  • Reception & Records (1): Intake, ledgers, appointments, messaging.
  • Pharmacy Assistant (1): Dispensing, stock, ration control.

Public Access, Operating Hours and Operational Rhythm

  • Walk-In & Appointments: 07:00–19:00 (triage queue + scheduled visits).
  • Immunization / Health-Ed Day: One afternoon weekly (posted at reception).
  • After-Hours: 19:00–07:00 bell/knock for emergencies; nurse/GP on call; stabilize → refer if needed.
  • Operating Days: Mon–Sat (Sun emergencies).

Services / Operations

Core practice operations and destinations:

Stream / Process What Enters Primary Handling Outputs Mandated Destination / Use
General Consultation Walk-ins & appointments History, exam, analog diagnostics Care plans, scripts Home care; follow-up
Minor Emergency Care Cuts, sprains, fever, minor trauma Triage, dressings, splints, observation Stabilized patients Discharge or referral
Maternal & Child Health Prenatal checks, growth visits Measures, counseling, scheduling Charts, referrals Ongoing care; hospital referral if risk
Immunization & Prevention Eligible cohorts Vaccines, health talks Immunized cohorts Community coverage ledgers
Pharmacy & Dispensing Prescriptions Script verification, ration ledger Issued meds, usage guidance Home treatment
Referrals & Transport Red-flag cases Stabilize, paperwork, arrange transport Transfer packet Medical Station of New Kourou
Naturopathy Liaison Approved herbals Safe-use guidance, interactions check Advice notes Community health posts

Security Measures

  • Perimeter: Low basalt wall with lit vestibule; rear service gate kept locked.
  • Controlled Access: Dispensary and records under analog key; drug counts logged.
  • Analog Alert System: Analog Siren System tied to the Local Sheriff’s Office (Firetown).
  • Deputy Pass-Throughs: Routine patrols; incident ledger at reception.

Legal interactions:

  • Present as a patient for triage, consultation, treatment, and prescriptions (walk-in or appointment).
  • Receive a GAIA assignment as health aide, triage runner, records clerk, or dispensary helper.
  • Volunteer on immunization day or assist with safe-use herb workshops.
  • Courier referrals or collect supplies from nearby public-service facilities.

Illegal interactions:

  • Forge scripts or ration entries to divert pharmaceuticals.
  • Tamper with immunization ledgers or cold-chain logs.
  • Stage a distraction to access the dispensary or records room.

Tactical Advice for Dungeon Masters

  • Adventure Hook — The Doctor Taken in Twilight (Firetown): After closing, the GP fails to answer the on-call bell. In the service bay: a shattered crate, cinders tracked across grit mats, and a falsified FCS waybill. Witnesses whisper the Jane Mendoza Gang name. Privately, the Sheriff reveals the doctor’s covert recon past from the Great War. Why take him now—drug synthesis, cache maps, cipher keys? Deputized off the books, the PCs chase forged ledgers through slag-hauler routes and geothermal conduit tunnels before the gang extracts what he knows.
federal_general_practitioner_of_firetown.1758342071.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/09/20 04:21 by admin

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