This matter is before the court on appeals and a cross-appeal from three judgments entered on February 25, 1975. In case #75-140, the defendant-appellant, Floyd K. Anderson, appeals from two judgments entered against him and in favor of plaintiffs-respondents, Jane Cords and Erwin T. Cords, her father and Norina Boyle and John J. Boyle, her father. In case #75-141, plaintiffs-respondents, Jane Cords and Erwin T. Cords, cross-appeal from the judgment in their favor, while plaintiffs-appellants, Susan Henry and Roland Henry, her father, appeal from the judgment dismissing their causes of action against the defendant-respondent, Floyd K. Anderson. The cases were consolidated for purposes of briefing and argument.
These cases present several questions.
I. Did the defendant,, Floyd K. Anderson, as manager of the state-owned Department of Natural Resources (DNR) operated “scientific area” known as Parfrey’s Glen, have a “ministrial duty” to either notify his superiors of dangerous natural features of the land within inches of the path or trial where people were invited to walk or to erect signs warning the public of such dangers within the glen, especially after twilight?
The trial court said there was such a duty. We agree and so hold.
II. Should the rescue doctrine be applied to the actions of Jane Cords and Susan Henry to lessen their *530duty of due care for their own safety when, within ten to fifteen minutes after Norina Boyle’s fall into the forge, together they attempted to climb down the pathway leading from the top of the cliff to come to her aid.
We hold that the rescue doctrine does apply and reverse the trial court on this issue, and remand for further proceedings.
III. Where the evidence of Jane Cords’ future medical expense established her current annual expense of $3,270 and the only economic evidence was that the medical care component of the Consumer Price Index has risen from 1967 through 1973 at 5% per year for a total rise during said years was 37.7 Jo; did the trial court err by refusing to consider that evidence in determining damages?
We hold that the trial court did err and that the reasonable probability of an increase or decrease in medical costs is a proper consideration for the court in the exercise of its discretion in assessing future medical expense and we remand for further proceedings.
IV. Was the trial court’s award of general damages in the amount of $300,000 for the injuries sustained by Jane Cords inadequate and without a reasonable basis in the evidence?
We hold that the trial court’s damage award of $300,-000 was supported by a reasonable basis in the evidence.
FACTS
Parfrey’s Glen, an area approximately eighty-nine acres in size is owned by the State of Wisconsin and located about four miles from Devil’s Lake State Park in Sauk county. In it is a preglacial gorge and it contains unique geological features of particular interest to scientists and students. A small stream once utilized to operate a gristmill has cut a canyon ranging from a *531few feet to nearly a hundred feet deep for a distance of approximately a thousand feet. The state acquired the property in 1947 and it is frequently visited by groups and by individuals. In 1953 and 1963, the state acquired an additional 80 and 151 acre parcels used as buffer zones to protect the unique and delicate plant life found in this area. It is called a “scientific area” because of its terrain and plant life.
On May 2, 1970, the three plaintiffs, Norina Boyle, Jane Cords and Sue Henry were students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and each visited Parfrey’s Glen for the first time. They were part of a group of four couples who had travelled by car from Madison for the purpose of picnicking and hiking in the Glen. The fourth girl, Vicky Helendar and the four young men, Dean Schraufnagel, Tom Tibbits, Jerry Rousseau and Tom Nelson had each been to the Glen at least once before.
Parfrey’s Glen fronts on a public highway where a sign announces to the public traveling in each direction; “Entrance to Parfrey’s Glen — Wisconsin Conservation Department.” The entrance road leads northerly over a quarter of a mile to a hard surfaced parking lot. Near the far end of the parking lot is a large sign that states,
“Parfrey’s Glen State Scientific Area. This area has been established by the State of Wisconsin to protect and preserve natural conditions for scientific study and research. The public is welcome to enjoy this area. Disturbing in any way animals or any living or dead vegetation is unlawful. Wisconsin Conservation Commission.”
A small sign along the entrance drive announced the closing hours of the “Park” from 11:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m. and prohibiting use of alcoholic beverages during the period of April 1st to May 18th.
North of the parking area, a gravel pathway runs past toilet facilities and numerous picnic tables, barbe*532que and garbage facilities. The gravel pathway forks a short distance north of the public toilets, one trail leads into the gorge at stream level known as the “lower trail” and the other trail travels upwards along the east side of the gorge leading to high ground over the stream “upper trail.” A department “trail” sign consisting of yellow letters on a brown wooden background points to the lower trail. These two trails join some distance to the north near the end of the canyon beyond a waterfall and thereby create a circular trail system. At the north end, the lower trail turns easterly and ascends into the bluff area known as the “ascending-descending trail.” Logs pegged into position along the trail facilitate climbing. At the top of the ascending trail is a camp site or picnic area where larger logs adjoin an area near charred remnants of fires. This area is used for picnics and no. signs prohibit fires there. From the picnic site the upper trail leads southerly meandering around the high ground with numerous' trail offshoots leading easterly to woods. At places, the upper trail comes within inches of the bluff edge or a bluff undercut. The high ground has obvious dropoffs to the west and to the northwest of the picnic area. A main branch of the upper trail running south from the picnic area toward the parking lot comes within a foot of the high bluff where the bluff is undercut obliquely to the southeast. The undercut is narrow, not readily discernible and within forty-five feet of the picnic area. This cutback or “shoot” as it was referred to in the testimony is at a place where one misstep of a foot in a southerly direction would cause an uninterrupted twenty foot, slide down a sharp incline to a direct dropoff of approximately eighty feet to the rock bottom of the gorge. This is the point where Norina Boyle fell.
The four young couples arrived at Parfrey’s Glen at approximately noon on May 2,1970. They brought food and sandwiches purchased earlier in the day and also cases *533of beer and a bottle of wine. They had some conversation about the sign forbidding the use of beer during April and May and concluded that it was an effort to control high-school groups at prom time. Dean Schraufnagel led the group on the lower trail toward the north and he explained some of the rocks and plant life present to the others in the group. At the site of the waterfall, they went up the ascending-descending trail to the picnic area where they deposited their food. Tom Nelson took part of the beer, and wrapped it in his jacket and put it in a separate place to keep cool. Norina Boyle was accompanied by Dean Schraufnagel and they walked to other parts of the Glen west and north of the waterfall. The other couples went on similar walks. They all returned about midafternoon to the campsite, ate the food they had brought and drank some of the beer.
While they were having lunch, Park Ranger Schutte, who was making his first patrol ever through Parfrey’s Glen, came across the group. He told them beer was prohibited and directed them to empty their beer supply which they did. Later they got the beer that Mr. Nelson had wrapped in his jacket and drank it with their evening meal. When they asked Mr. Schutte if the could continue their lunch and stay, he told them that they could.
He subsequently filed an official report with Mr. Anderson, the Park Manager, in which he stated, “All the individuals were neatly dressed and neat appearing. The men were clean shaven, and their hair was combed. None of the group appeared to be drunk . . . their attitude was good, they did not give me any static, no back talk, so I decided to merely have them dump the beer.”
Ms. Boyle testified she had two to four cans of beer the whole day and the testimony of others was that she appeared sober at all times. She testified that none of the beer she drank had any effect upon her. There is no contradicting testimony. Jane Cords had about three *534cans of beer the entire day and testified that she was unaffected and that testimony was substantiated by the others. Sue Henry was described by some of the party as “giddy” or “silly.” Others in the group described her as sober. The trial court found that Ms. Henry “was a little intoxicated or silly, or at least showing the signs of ingestion of alcoholic beverages.”
Following lunch, the couples hiked around the area meeting at the picnic site for their evening meal. When it grew cooler they built a campfire on the location of ashes from previous fires. Norina had walked around the area but had not gone to see the upper trail area where she later fell. Mr. Tibbits stood about fifteen feet south of the campfire when Ms. Boyle, walking southerly, passed him on the trail. No one is sure why she did this. Her own traumatic amnesia prevents her from recalling the incident. Most of the group thought she was going to relieve herself away from the campfire area. There was some testimony that she may have been looking for a glove or gloves. She continued on the upper trail until she disappeared from the light of the campfire. In a few moments, a noise was heard that sounded like a falling object. Several in the group called out Ms. Boyle’s name and when there was no response, they were alarmed. Mr. Tibbits took the only flashlight in the group and went down the ascending-descending trail to the gorge below. Shortly he called up that he found her at the bottom of the gorge, that she didn’t have a pulse and that she needed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Mr. Rousseau went down into the gorge by the same route without a flashlight. He returned to the bluff campsite and told Sue Henry and Jane Cords to stay by the fire and wait for awhile. He also told them that Sue Henry might be able to help Ms. Boyle because she had previous nursing experience.
*535Ms. Cords was very upset after Ms. Boyle’s fall because Ms. Boyle was her best friend. Ms. Cords had found out during the day that Ms. Henry was a trained practical nurse. Ms. Cords had gone to get wood for the fire and when she returned, Ms. Henry said she was going to go down into the gorge and give Mr. Tibbits some assistance, because she was a nurse’s aide.
Ms. Henry and Ms. Cords went down the trail that Ms. Cords had been on two or three times that day. They took a few steps and decided to sit down and slide down because it would be safer to feel their way. As they were going down, she saw Sue Henry go down and reached out for her. Ms. Cords testified that she thought Ms. Henry was falling and reached for her and “I tumbled over forward, I can remember falling.” She regained consciousness at the bottom of the gorge. She tried to get up and couldn’t. At the time of their fall, they were following the path, the ascending-descending trail, that Mr. Rousseau and Mr. Tibbits had gone on to try and find Ms. Boyle. Ms. Henry and Ms. Cords fell about sixty feet.
Ms. Boyle’s fall had occurred about 8:30 p.m. and it was ten to fifteen minutes later that the other two young ladies had their accident. The women were later taken out of the gorge by the authorities to the hospital.
Ms. Cords received very serious injuries and will be confined to a wheel chair for the rest of her life. Her injuries are discussed in greater detail infra.
Sue Henry was nineteen years old at the time of accident. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin in Madison in August of 1972 with a B.A. in social work. She was a nurse’s aide for sixteen to thirty-two hours a week at University Hospitals from January 1969 through April 1970. She was also a nursing student and had about eleven weeks of the first nursing course. She considered herself experienced in matters such as first *536aid and was majoring in nursing until one or two weeks prior to the accident. She received a skull fracture in the accident and says that as a result of the day’s activities, her memory is very poor. She remembers no discussion about even going to Parfrey’s Glen. She doesn’t remember drinking any beer and doesn’t remember falling.
Floyd K. Anderson’s Testimony
Floyd K. Anderson was the manager of Devil’s Lake State Park and also Parfrey’s Glen at, the time that these accidents occurred. He started out with the department as a carpenter and in August of 1958, he was transferred to Copper Falls State Park in Ashland County as Park Manager. He had no training as a park manager before assuming those duties except what he described as “informal training for just one day.” He said his duties there were to make sure that the equipment, including trucks, tractors, mowers, bridges and guard rails around the gorge in that park were safe. He stated that he had to be sure that the “guard rails and trails were in safe condition.” He estimated that while he was there, a half mile of guard rail and two and one-half to three miles of foot paths were constructed under' his supervision. He stated that the duty of the park manager was to render reports to his superiors as to what steps were to be taken to reduce safety hazards or improve conditions for public use. While at Copper Falls he made such reports to his area supervisor. He was also free to initiate safety precautions on his own at Copper Falls. He closed off unsafe steps and closed an observation tower for repairs because of unsafe timbers in the platform of the observation tower.
Mr. Anderson came to Devil’s Lake and Parfrey’s Glen in 1965 as an assistant park manager. By 1966 he knew that the paths at Parfrey’s Glen went near the edge *537of sheer drop off right into the glen and that the trails never had any rail, sign or protective devices of any kind warning people or advising them not to use the upper trail. Mr. Anderson knew that these trails were especially hazardous at night, but from 1965 to the time of the accident, there were no signs warning of the hazard. He agreed that these conditions were hazardous and that he wouldn’t want to be on the trails after dark.
In November 1968 Anderson became park manager of Devil’s Lake and Parfrey’s Glen. During that time he could not have closed any of the trails at the glen without his supervisor’s consent, but he never even informed his supervisor of any of the hazardous conditions. It was his job to make recommendations for public safety at, the glen. He never recommended to his supervisors that warning signs be erected or that trails be closed. He didn’t know if his supervisor had ever been at the glen.
Trial was before the court and on February 25, 1975, the trial court entered the following judgments:
(1) For Erwin T. Cords against the defendant in the amount of $7,675.54.
(2) For Jane Cords against the defendant in the amount of $208,921.06.
(3) For John J. Boyle against the defendant in the amount of $4,772.98.
(4) For Norina Boyle against the defendant in the amount of $36,128.04.
(5) Dismissal of the actions of Roland Henry and Susan Henry against, the defendant.
Defendant Anderson, represented by the Attorney General, appealed from the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs Irwin and Jane Cords, and John and Norina Boyle. Plaintiffs Irwin and Jane Cords, cross-appealed from the same judgment as to the trial court’s findings on negligence and damages. Plaintiffs Roland and Susan *538Henry, appealed from the judgment dismissing their causes of action against the defendant.
I. PARK MANAGER’S DUTY.
The first question is whether Mr. Anderson, as manager of the state-owned, Department of Natural Resources (DNR) operated Parfrey’s Glen, had a “ministerial duty” to either notify his superiors of hazardous natural features inches from the trail or to erect signs warning the public of such dangers, particularly after dark.
The Attorney General misinterprets this first question.1 It is not whether Anderson was required to tell his supervisors that a ninety foot cliff was dangerous after dark. The question is whether the supervisors should have been notified about a trail that people regularly used and that passed a few inches from an undercut dropping into a ninety foot gorge.
The second question posed by the Attorney General is, “Does a manager . . . have a ministerial duty to erect a sign warning of an obvious danger such as falling from a ninety foot cliff, where his superiors have authorized no such sign and the written policy is to ‘leave it alone.’ ” There can be no policy of leaving it alone when such an obvious danger exists. This phrasing is an attempt to reduce the duty question to an absurdity and it offers no help in analyzing the legal issues involved in view of the fact situation which this case presents.
*539The proper question involves an analysis of the legal theory under which a plaintiff in a negligence suit can recover from a public officer individually acting in his capacity as a public officer and employee of the state.
Parfrey's Glen was a state-owned recreational area maintained, supervised and operated by the DNR. The public was invited and encouraged to enter upon the land for recreational, educational and other purposes. This cause of action arose prior to this court’s decision in Antoniewicz v. Reszczynski, 70 Wis.2d 886, 231 N.W. 2d (1975) wherein this court abolished the distinction between invitees and licensees v/ith regard to a landowner’s duty. The role of the state as landlord is not involved in this case because the state is immune from suit under the constitution of the state.2 Cords v. Ehly, 62 Wis.2d 31, 35, 36, 214 N.W.2d 432 (1974).
There is general personal tort immunity for a public official acting within the scope of his official authority and in the line of his official duties. In Lister v. Board *540of Regents, 72 Wis.2d 282, 240 N.W.2d 6Í0 (1976), this court stated at p. 800:
“The general rule is that a public officer is not personally liable to one injured as a result of an act performed within the scope of his official authority and in the line of his official duty. The various exceptions to this rule are determined by a judicial balancing of the need of public officers to perform their functions freely against the right of an aggrieved party to seek redress.”
This court further noted that a public officer’s personal tort immunity was not based upon the doctrine of sovereign immunity, but rather upon different considerations :
“The doctrine of sovereign immunity and the principle which extends an immunity to public officers from civil liability for damages are two separate and distinct concepts. As noted above, the state sovereign immunity from suit is procedural in nature and arises from the state constitution. The immunity afforded public officers with respect to the performance of their official functions, on the other hand, is a substantive limitation on their personal liability for damages and is common law. It does not derive, as the language in some cases would imply, from the state’s sovereign immunity under art. IV, sec. 27 of the Wisconsin Constitution, but from considerations of public policy. These considerations have been variously identified in the cases as follows: (1) The danger of influencing public officers in the performance of their functions by the threat of lawsuit; (2) the deterrent effect which the threat of personal liability might have on those who are considering entering public service; (3) the drain on valuable time caused by such actions; (4) the unfairness of subjecting officials to personal liability for the acts of their subordinates; and (5) the feeling that the ballot and removal procedures are more appropriate methods of dealing with misconduct in public office.” Lister, supra, 298, 299.
*541See also: Cords v. Ehly, supra, 39; Bromund v. Holt, 24 Wis.2d 336, 129 N.W.2d 149 (1964).
There is an exception to the general rule that a public official acting within the scope of his official authority and in the line of his official duties is immune from tort liability. That exception was expressed by this court in Lister, supra, pp. 300, 301:
“The most generally recognized exception to the rule of immunity is that an officer is liable for damages resulting from his negligent performance of a purely ministerial duty. A public officer’s duty is ministerial only when it is absolute, certain and imperative, involving merely the performance of a specific task when the law imposes, prescribes and defines the time, mode and occasion for its performance with such certainty that nothing remains for judgment or discretion.”
See also: Cords v. Ehly, supra, 41; Chart, supra, 101; Clausen v. Eckstein, 7 Wis.2d 409, 413, 97 N.W.2d 201 (1959); Meyer v. Carman, 271 Wis. 329, 331, 332, 73 N.W.2d 514 (1955).
The question here is whether the defendant Anderson had an absolute, certain, or imperative duty to either place the signs warning the public of the dangerous conditions existing on the upper trail or to advise his superiors of the condition with a view toward adequate protection of the public responding to the invitation to use this facility. There comes a time when “the buck stops.” Anderson knew the terrain at the glen was dangerous particularly at night; he was in a position as park manager to do something about it; he failed to do anything about it. He is liable for the breach of this duty.
Mr. Anderson’s supervisors testified that he could have put up warnings signs in the same manner that *542he put up other signs at Devil’s Lake. Mr. Anderson could also have asked to close the upper trails. Both of these precautions would have required a supervisor’s approval, but the approval was never sought nor were the supervisors ever apprised of the danger.
We hold that the duty to either place warning signs or advise superiors of the conditions is, on the facts here, a duty so clear and so absolute that it falls within the definition of a ministerial duty.
The plaintiff Norina Boyle does not challenge the allocation of negligence made by the trial court which found 55% causal negligence attributable to the defendant Anderson and 45% to her. The state claims that Ms. Boyle’s negligence was greater than any negligence of Mr. Anderson.
An examination of the entire record shows that the allocation of negligence and the finding of causality by the trial court is not against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence and accordingly we must affirm the trial court’s finding in this respect. The amount of damages awarded to Norina Boyle and her father are undisputed and are therefore affirmed.
II. APPLICABILITY OF RESCUE DOCTRINE.
In 1921, Justice Cardozo, in Wagner v. International Ry., 232 N.Y. 176, 133 N.E. 437, 438 (1921), set forth the principles underlying the doctrine that absolves a rescuer from finding of contributory negligence.
“Danger invites rescue. The cry of distress is the summons to relief. The law does not ignore these reactions of the mind in tracing conduct to its consequences. It recognizes them as normal. It places their effects within the range of the natural and probable. The wrong that imperils life is a wrong to the imperiled *543victim; it is wrong also to his rescuer. The state that leaves an opening in a bridge is liable to the child that falls into the stream, but liable also to the parent who plunges to its aid. . . . The risk of rescue, if only it be not wanton, is borne of the occasion. The emergency begets the man. The wrongdoer may not have foreseen the coming of the deliverer. He is accountable as if he had. . .”
In 65A C.J.S., Negligence, Sec. 124, the rule is stated:
“Under what is commonly referred to as the rescue doctrine, conduct which might otherwise be considered contributory negligence may not be so considered where a person is injured in attempting to save others from imminent danger or personal injury or death. Persons are held justified in assuming greater risks in the protection of human life where they would not be under other circumstances.”
“One is not guilty of contributory negligence in exposing himself to danger of injury in order to rescue another from imminent danger of personal injury or déath, if, under the same or similar circumstances, an ordinary prudent person might so expose himself, or, as often expressed, if the act of intervention is not performed under such circumstances as would make it rash or reckless in the judgment of ordinarily prudent persons. This is true even though the person attempting the rescue knows it involves great hazard to himself without certainty of accomplishing the attempted rescue and even though in attempting such rescue he thereby imperils his own life.”
Wagner and the rescue doctrine were cited with approval in Central Wis. Trust Co. v. Chicago & N.W. R. Co., 232 Wis. 536, 543, 287 N.W. 699 (1939), The doctrine was again cited in Brady v. Chicago & N.W. R. Co., 265 Wis. 618, 625, 62 N.W.2d 415 (1954). In Brady, this court said:
“Liability by a defendant to a rescuer must rest on a breach of a duty owed directly by the defendant to *544the rescuer, or by the defendant to the person whose rescue is attempted . .
Susan Henry suffered from traumatic amnesia and was unable to recall events prior to, during or following her fall into the glen.
Jane Cords, however, recalled the events following Norina Boyle’s fall:
“. . . Sue Henry and myself were at the fire ... we decided to keep the fire, keep it going ... I knew she (Susan Henry) was a nurse’s aide at the hospital . . . When I came back from getting some wood for the fire, Sue, I believe, had some blankets and said she was going to go down and give Tom Tibbits some assistance, that she was an aide and she may have pointed it out to me again, and it sounded like a real good idea . . . Since it was so dark, I was a little, . . . my first reaction was, oh, no, we’ll never make it. But when Norina really needed help and I knew . . . the blankets would help her and if Sue could give her any aid at all, it would be really good. And so Norina’s need far outweighed any hazard to myself and Sue and we buttoned up our coats and I put my gloves on and we were going to take it slow and easy and, . . . work our way down . . . We were going to stay very close together. We were (holding on to each other) . . . Sue . . . went down first and (Jane Cords was behind holding her) ... We were going to go down the exact way we had come up that day. So I had been down and up there, up that trail two or three times, so that’s the trail we were going to take down. We started down and we got — we took a few steps and we decided to sit down and slide down because that would be safer to kind of feel our way. We didn’t get too far before we fell ... I don’t know if I saw Sue go down and I reached out for her or — that’s sort of the way I remember. I can remember seeing Sue go down but I don’t know if she just jumped on to a lower level. I believe that I thought she was falling and I reached for her, and then I tumbled over forward and I can remember falling, . . .”
On cross-examination, Jane Cords testified regarding Sue Henry:
*545“I figured she would find her way down there but I would help her, steady her. I guess two heads are better than one ... At that point, I was thinking of Norina lying down in the ravine, ... I was just really concerned about Norina . . .”
The trial court on this record held that the “rescue doctrine” did not apply and assessed forty percent negligence to Ms. Cords and sixty percent negligence to Ms. Henry. In giving reasons for holding both women causally negligent, the trial court said:
“Plaintiffs Henry and Cords urge the Court to apply the ‘Rescue Rule’ in arriving at causation, and a combination of rescue argument and emergency argument to urge absence of negligence on the part of these two girls . . . Suffice it to say that the facts here would not fit the rule for several reasons. Tibbits had already found Boyle and was assisting her, so in a sense she had already been rescued. Secondly, some 10 to 15 minutes elapsed between Boyle’s fall and the start down the trail by Cords and Henry so that the situation probably no longer compelled rescue. No one was calling for their assistance and help had already been gone for . . . These plaintiffs urge that the compelling urgency of the situation requires invoking the emergency doctrine or the rescue rule thereby excusing them from taking precautionary steps that otherwise might be taken upon reflection. The rescue rule is in a sense an emergency doctrine. However, since the Court feels that both of them were negligent, no application of any emergency or rescue rule should be invoked . . .”
We hold that the Court erred in its ruling that the rescue doctrine did not apply here. The court confused the emergency doctrine with the rescue rule, but the two are separate. The “emergency doctrine” relieves a person of liability for his actions when that person is faced with a sudden emergency that he didn’t help to create.
*546This Court in Lutz v. Shelby Mut. Ins. Co., 70 Wis.2d 743, 754, 235 N.W.2d 426 (1975) held that there are three basic requirements which must be met before the emergency doctrine can be applied. First, the party seeking the benefits of the emergency doctrine must be free from negligence which contributed to the creation of the emergency. Second, the time element in which action is required must be short enough to preclude deliberate and intelligent choice of action. Third, the element of negligence being inquired into must concern management and control before the emergency doctrine can apply.
The emergency doctrine is most commonly applied in auto accident situations and is a different doctrine applied to a different set of facts than is the rescue rule. The requirement in the emergency doctrine that the time element must be so short as to preclude a deliberate or intelligent choice of action is not an element in the rescue doctrine. The rescue doctrine is applicable even though the action of the one doing the rescue is deliberate and taken after some planning or consideration.
_ “We may assume, though we are not required to decide, that peril and rescue must be in substance one transaction, that the sight of the one must have aroused the impulse of the other; in short, that there must be unbroken continuity between the commission of the wrong and the effort to avert its consequences. . . . The law does not discriminate between the rescuer oblivious of peril and the one who counts the cost. It is enough that the act, whether impulsive or deliberate, is the child of the occasion.” Wagner, supra, at 438.
Even though rescuers are given special consideration under the law, they are not protected in all circumstances.
*547“A rescuer — one who, from the most unselfish motives, prompted by the noblest impulses than can impel man to deeds of heroism, faces deadly peril — ought not to hear from the law words of condemnation of his bravery, because he rushed into danger, to snatch from it the life of a fellow creature imperiled by the negligence of another; but he should rather listen to words of approval, unless regretfully withheld on account of the unmistakable evidence of his rashness and imprudence.” Corbin v. City of Philadelphia, 195 Pa. 461, 45 A. 1070, 1072, 1073 (1900).
Even as rescuers, Ms. Cords and Ms. Henry will not be absolved of all negligence if their action was unreasonable under the circumstances.
The two women had been told by Mr. Tibbits to stay at the fire. After Ms. Boyle fell they knew that walking the trail might be dangerous, but Ms. Cords had walked the trail two or three times that day without mishap and Mr. Rousseau had negotiated it minutes earlier without a flashlight. Ms. Henry, who had training as a nurse was also told that she might be able to assist the injured Ms. Boyle who had no pulse and who required artificial resuscitation. Ms. Henry and Ms. Cords started down the trail with blankets that would have been helpful if Ms. Boyle was in shock.3 The trial court found that Ms. Cords was not under the influence of intoxicants, but that Ms. Henry was “a little intoxicated or silly.”
The trial court took many of these same factors into account, but decided that the rescue rule didn’t apply because Ms. Cords and Ms. Henry were negligent. The trial court’s analysis fails to consider the purpose of the rescue rule which is to encourage rescues even where danger is involved. The question is whether the social interest in attempting to effect a rescue is such that the *548conduct of a plaintiff in attempting the rescue is unreasonable under the circumstances ?4
The rule is stated in The Law of Torts, W. L. Prosser, 4th Edition, West Publishing Co., 1971, p. 451:
“In all these cases, of course, the danger may be so extreme as to be out of all proportion to the value of the interest to be protected, and the plaintiff may be charged with contributory negligence in his own unreasonable conduct.”
We hold that a rescuer is not, negligent where the rescue, although dangerous, is not unreasonable or unreasonably carried out. In a comparative negligence jurisdiction such as Wisconsin, if the trier of fact finds that the rescue is unreasonable or unreasonably carried out the fact finder should then make a comparison of negligence between the rescuer and the one whose negligence created the situation to which the rescue was a response.
In the case before us, if the trier of'fact, after applying the rescue doctrine, found Ms. Cords acted unreasonably, then it would make a comparison of her negligence with Anderson’s. The same would be true if Ms. Henry was found to have acted unreasonably. Her negligence would then be compared to Anderson’s negligence, Anderson having been found negligent in this case and that finding confirmed by a majority of this court. Given Ms. Boyle’s condition after a fall of eighty or more feet, Ms. Henry’s nursing experience, Ms. Cords familiarity with the trail and the cautious manner in which they started down the trail, the trial court must determine from the record whether the de-*549cisión to go to Ms. Boyle’s aid was reasonable and reasonably carried out. Both these women were entitled to have the trier of fact consider their actions under the rescue doctrine.
We reverse the judgment dismissing the action of Susan Henry and her father and remand the case to the trial court for determination under the rescue rule. The damages to Susan Henry and her father found by the trial court are not challenged on this appeal5 and therefore stand in the calculation of any award the trial court may make.
Having found the damages as determined by the trial court in the case of Jane and Erwin Cords to be reasonable, except as to future medical expenses, those figures will stand in the calculation of any award the trial court may make on remand.6
III. FUTURE MEDICAL EXPENSES.
The plaintiff’s economic expert determined that if medical costs remained constant indefinitely into the future, Ms. Cords future medical expenses would be $45,284, reduced to present value. But if the present five per cent rate of medical cost inflation continues *550into the future, Ms. Cords medical expenses would be $104,988 reduced to present value. The trial judge allowed Ms. Cords $45,284 for future medical expenses and refused to make any allowance for rising medical costs. Jane Cords argues that the trial court erred in refusing to consider the effect of inflation on her future medical expenses. We agree.
This court has previously taken into account the effect of inflation on the adequacy of damage verdicts. A verdict that “. . . would have been excessive years ago might not even be adequate today.” Crye v. Mueller, 7 Wis.2d 182, 191, 96 N.W.2d 520 (1958). Juries have been allowed to consider changing economic conditions between the time of injury and the time of trial and jury instructions to that effect have been approved. Bethke v. Duwe, 256 Wis. 378, 41 N.W.2d 277 (1949); Dabareiner v. Weisflog, 253 Wis. 23, 33 N.W.2d 220 (1948).
Whether future inflation should be considered in determining future damages has not previously been decided by this court. In some of the federal courts of appeal the recent trend has been to allow, but not require the fact finder to consider inflation when awarding future damages. Perry v. Allegheny Airlines, Inc., 489 F.2d 1349 (2nd Cir. 1974); Willmore v. Hertz Corp., 437 F.2d 357 (6th Cir. 1971); McCauley v. United States, 470 F.2d 137 (9th Cir. 1972); United States v. English, 521 F.2d 63 (9th Cir. 1975); cf. Johnson v. Serra, 521 F.2d 1289 (8th Cir. 1975); Murphy v. Eaton, 444 F.2d 317 (6th Cir. 1971); William’s v. United States, 435 F.2d 804 (1st Cir. 1970). Murphy, supra, and Willmore, supra, were personal injury actions. The rest of the cases cited were wrongful death actions based on federal claims. All of the cited cases applied the substantive damages law of the state.
Several state courts have also allowed the fact finder to consider inflation when determining future damages. *551Schnebly v. Baker, 217 N.W.2d 708, 726 (Iowa 1974); DeWitt v. Schuhbauer, 287 Minn. 279, 177 N.W.2d 790 (1970); Plourd v. Southern Pacific Transportation Corp., 513 P.2d 1140, 1146 (Ore. 1973); Beaulieu v. Elliott, (Alaska 1967), 434 Pac.2d 665.
In Schnebly, supra, one of the damages, was the cost of future medical care. The Iowa court realized that considering the effect of inflation would he somewhat speculative but they also realized that to do otherwise would not fully compensate victims for their losses. Schnebly, supra, at 727, 728.
In Wisconsin damages are,
“. . . given to make whole the damage or injury suffered by the injured party. White v. Benkowski, 37 Wis. 2d 285, 290, 155 N.W.2d 74 (1967).
“. . . The plaintiffs are not required to ascertain their damages with mathematical precision, but rather the trier of fact must set damages at a reasonable amount.” White, supra, at 289.
In arriving at an adequate compensation figure, any award for future damages is to some degree speculative. Certainly awards for future pain and suffering or the use of mortality tables to determine life expectancy are speculative. Failure to consider inflation also requires speculation that inflation of medical expenses will not continue to occur during the course of future medical treatment. This assumption is highly conjectural because the parties stipulated that medical costs have risen on an average of five percent per year during the seven years preceding the trial.
The trial court discounted Ms. Cords’ recovery to present value. In effect the trial court estimated the future return from Ms. Cords’ recovery and discounted it accordingly, but the trial court refused to estimate any effect from inflation. However, inflation may be taken *552into account by the fact finder as a separate factor to arrive at an amount that will fairly compensate the victim for required future medical expenses.
In this case the trial court refused to consider stipulated evidence concerning rising medical costs because of the “state of speculation of our economy.” This is precisely the situation where inflation affects costs. The refusal to take inflation into account for that reason was an abuse of discretion. On remand, the trial court will not be limited to mathematically applying a five percent annual inflation rate indefinitely into the future to determine future damages. But the court should consider inflation as it seems reasonably probable in reaching a reasonable damage figure. The court’s determination will control absent an abuse of discretion.7
IV. ADEQUACY OF $300,000 FOR JANE CORDS' GENERAL DAMAGES.
The respondent, Jane Cords, argues that $300,000 is inadequate to compensate her for general damages.
“A trial court finding that a jury award is excessive will be overturned only for an abuse of discretion. The test to determine abuse is whether, if the trial court had been sitting as the sole finder of fact and had fixed the plaintiffs’ damages in the disputed amount, this court would still disturb the findings. If there is a reasonable basis for the trial court’s determination as to the proper amount it will be sustained.’’ Lutz v. Shelby Mutual Ins. Co., 70 Wis.2d 743, 759, 235 N.W.2d 426, 435 (1975).8
In reviewing damage awards granted in either a bench or jury trial this court does not substitute its judgment *553for that of the fact finder, but rather determines whether the award is within reasonable limits. Olson v. Siordia, 25 Wis.2d 274, 285, 180 N.W.2d 827, 833 (1964).
Normally “. . . in determining whether there is a reasonable basis for the trial court’s determination we are aided by its own analysis of the evidence and appraisal of the award.” Gleason v. Gilihan, 32 Wis.2d 50, 59, 145 N.W.2d 90 (1966). But in this case the trial court gave no reasons for the award in the memorandum decision so the entire record must be reviewed as a matter of first impression. Bach v. Liberty Mutual Fire Ins. Co., 36 Wis.2d 72, 83, 152 N.W.2d 911 (1967); Ballard v. Lumberman’s Mut. Casualty Co., 33 Wis.2d 601, 607, 148 N.W.2d 65 (1967).
The evidence is still viewed in the light most favorable to support the damage award. Grassl v. Nelson, 75 Wis.2d 107, 114, 248 N.W.2d 403 (1976).
On May 2, 1970 Jane Cords was an athletic University of Wisconsin, Madison, sophomore who planned to major in physical education. As a result of her fall, Ms. Cords lost consciousness, both of her lungs were ruptured and collapsed, her right wrist was fractured and her spinal cord was injured resulting in permanent paraplegia and loss of feeling below the chest cage. After the accident she contracted phlebitis in her left leg and began to suffer from a permanent condition of uncontrolled muscle cramps that occasionally threw her out of bed or off her wheelchair. She has undergone major spinal surgery and a long period of therapy to learn to cope with paraplegia. She has no control over her bowels or bladder and is permanently catheterized. She is exposed to the bladder and skin problems which often accompany paraplegia.
Her medical expenses will probably average between $600-$700 per year plus an average of fifteen days in a hospital at a 1972 cost of $175.00 per day. Her wheel*554chair will cost $400-$500 and last from three to four years. The normal life expectancy of a woman of Ms. Cords age was 53.1 years at the time of trial. This estimate is reduced from ten to forty percent for paraplegics.
In their brief Ms. Cords’ counsel contend without citing any authority that awards of $650,000 to over $900,000 have been sustained for such damages and that an award in excess of $450,000 would be fair and reasonable.
Comparison of verdicts from other cases is an imperfect analogy which at best only offers guidelines to a solution. Springen v. Ager Plumbing & Heating, Inc., 19 Wis.2d 487, 493, 120 N.W.2d 692 (1963). Lutz v. Shelby Mut. Ins. Co., 70 Wis.2d 743, 759, 235 N.W.2d 426, 435 (1975). Awards averaging $451,090 have been made for similar injuries in other states, but that average includes cases with quadraplegia a more serious injury than paraplegia. Furthermore, fifty percent of the awards for paralysis from spinal injuries range from $175,000 to $555,000.9
Ms. Cords award could have been higher, but $300,000 damages for these injuries is not unreasonably low.
In considering these matters on remand, because the cases were tried by the court without a jury, a new trial with the presentation of all evidence is not necessary. The trial court may review the record in view of this opinion and make such new findings of fact as it deems proper. The trial court may hear additional arguments of counsel if it concludes such argument is necessary or helpful.
By the Court. — The judgment in favor of John Boyle and Norina Boyle is affirmed. The judgment dismissing the causes of action of Roland Henry and Sue Henry is *555reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The judgment in favor of Erwin Cords and Jane Cords is reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
He states the first question to be: “Does the failure of a manager of a state-owned scientific area to notify his superiors, who are already familiar with the area terrain, that he considers a ninety foot cliff dangerous after dark, constitute negligence where managers and superiors are following administrative rules and scientific areas preservation policy to ‘leave it alone.?'”
Art. IV, see. 27, of the Wisconsin Constitution provides:
“The legislature shall direct by law in what manner and in what court suits may be brought against the state.”
The rule developed from this constitutional provision is that the state cannot be sued without its consent. Kenosha, v. State, 35 Wis.2d 317, 322, 151 N.W.2d 36 (1967). However sec. 270.58, Stats. (1969) provides:
“State and Political Subdivisions Thereof To Pay Judgments Taken Against Officers. (1) Where the defendant in any action or special proceeding is a public officer or employe and is proceeded against in his official capacity or is proceeded against as an individual because of acts committed while carrying out his duties as an officer or employe and the jury or the court finds that he acted in good faith the judgment as to damages and costs entered against the officer or employe shall be paid by the state or political subdivision of which he is an officer or employe . . .” The trial court found that Mr. Anderson acted in good faith.
Proper treatment for shock includes maintenance of body temperature. Attorney’s Textbook Of Medicine, 3rd Ed., Koscoe N. Gray, M.D., vol. 1A, paragraph 10.16(3).
In jurisdictions where the doctrine of contributory negligence governs, the rescuer’s conduct must he “rash and imprudent,” Corbin, supra,, or “wanton,” Wagner, supra,, to be beyond the protection of the rescue doctrine.
The trial court found medical, hospital and related expenses incurred by Roland Henry in the amount of $2,314.15. $18.25 of the same expenses were found for Susan Henry. $25,000 was found by the trial court as a reasonable sum to compensate Susan Henry for her injuries.
The trial court found the following:
$2,917.77 in medical, hospital and related expense damage incurred by her to the date of the findings. The figure was stipulated by the parties.
$300,000 as a fair and reasonable sum to compensate her for her injuries. The defendant does not challenge that figure.
$45,284.00 for future medical expense reduced to present value. This finding is discussed below. The defendant does not challenge this figure.
McCrossen v. Nekoosa Edwards Paper Co., 59 Wis.2d 245, 208 N.W.2d 148 (1973).
A similar approach was followed in Moritz v. Allied American, 27 Wis.2d 13, 133 N.W.2d 235 (1965).
Personal Injury Valuation Handbooks, Vol. I, No. 138, Coccyx, sacrum and spinal cord injuries. (1971). See also, 12 A.L.R.3d 117.