>Yes. But 45 minutes later45 minutes later that person (or someone else) could be dead because paperwork created a choke point.
The trade off here, again, is reducing overall efficiency (bandwidth) to get the results that are needed now ASAP (latency).
Once the mayhem is over, those patients can have new X-Rays done the next day, the records can be sorted out the next week, etc.
How would you even justify it?
I'm sorry, ma'am, I understand you're in pain and dying after being shot, but waiting a few minutes NOW will really save us some time filing paperwork going forward.
Note that it's not just about the patients getting the X-Rays; with 250+ people arriving at the same time, any delay propagates with cascading effects and delays care for everyone.
Even non-critical patients waiting for their turn creates an issue, since space is limited.