03-29-2008, 06:23
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#1
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Guerrilla Chief
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 880
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A True Medical Alert
For those of us that work to save lives there is an inherent risk, especially in our world of Trauma. Patient and family satisfaction don't always add up to a positive number especially when we are held 'responsible' for a good outcome that may not happen. (can't make chicken soup out of chicken shit paradigm)
I have been stabbed in the leg, threatened that "if she dies doc, you die" (the brother of a patient driving drunk and hit a wall at 90mph and in coma), pushed around, punched and verbally abused. After the stabbing, I have been armed every day at work. Even in my neck of the woods, people come to our hospital with a grudge.
Be warned, be armed. The hospital police are for the most part out of shape, poor shots, never around and too far away. This is were I use my 'smart carry' holster, under scrubs or dress pants. Never un-armed in this environment and this article is one of many we read from around the country every week.
http://www.macon.com/220/story/306000.html
ss
__________________
'Revel in action, translate perceptions into instant judgements, and these into actions that are irrevocable, monumentous and dreadful - all this with lightning speed, in conditions of great stress and in an environment of high tension:what is expected of "us" is the impossible, yet we deliver just that.
(adapted from: Sherwin B. Nuland, MD, surgeon and author: The Wisdom of the Body, 1997 )
Education is the anti-ignorance we all need to better treat our patients. ss, 2008.
The blade is so sharp that the incision is perfect. They don't realize they've been cut until they're out of the fight: A Surgeon Warrior. I use a knife to defend life and to save it. ss (aka traumadoc)
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swatsurgeon is offline
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03-29-2008, 08:29
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#2
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Guerrilla Chief
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 880
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3 years after I left the last hospital trauma center I ran...this happened:
Officer Killed in Hospital ShootingFriday, September 30, 2005 | 6:44 PMSuspect in Custody LANGHORNE, Pa. (AP) -Sept. 30, 2005 -- Two neighboring police departments pitched in to patrol the streets of tiny Newtown Borough on Friday, a day after a hospital shooting left one of the borough's four officers dead and another wounded.
Officer Brian Steven Gregg, 46, was killed Thursday night after he and officer James Joseph Warunek, 31, scuffled with a drunken-driving suspect they had taken to St. Mary Medical Center in Langhorne, Bucks County, for routine blood and urine tests.
Police said the suspect, Robert A. Flor, 38, grabbed Warunek's gun and fired five shots, killing Gregg and wounding Warunek.
And 1 year ago, one of the hospitals dealing with victims of the VA tech shooting had a prisoner steal a sheriffs gun and shot a hospital security guard .
Not a safe place to work......
__________________
'Revel in action, translate perceptions into instant judgements, and these into actions that are irrevocable, monumentous and dreadful - all this with lightning speed, in conditions of great stress and in an environment of high tension:what is expected of "us" is the impossible, yet we deliver just that.
(adapted from: Sherwin B. Nuland, MD, surgeon and author: The Wisdom of the Body, 1997 )
Education is the anti-ignorance we all need to better treat our patients. ss, 2008.
The blade is so sharp that the incision is perfect. They don't realize they've been cut until they're out of the fight: A Surgeon Warrior. I use a knife to defend life and to save it. ss (aka traumadoc)
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swatsurgeon is offline
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03-29-2008, 09:21
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#3
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Wherever my ruck finds itself
Posts: 2,972
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DocT and I worked in a hospital in upstate SC where these were a near weekly ocurance. I cant recount the number of times someone made there way into the ER or the trauma bays carrying a firearm to finish off what they started, threaten the staff, or attempt to kill one or more of us for their loved one dying.
As you stated Sid, the security in hospitals for the most part was and still is useless. Its past time for us to become responsible for our own security instead of entrusting it to those who are no more capable than the average citizen.
Now if I could find a way to carry on the ambulance once I return home I would be in business...
Crip
__________________
"It's better to die on your feet than live on your knees."
"Its not who I am underneath, but what I do that defines me" -Batman
"There are no obstacles, only opportunities for excellence."- NousDefionsDoc
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Surgicalcric is offline
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03-29-2008, 09:32
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#4
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 20,929
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I remember Doc T being in the hospital with a prisoner on the loose..... found him in the air duct if I remember correctly. Stupid bastard watched too many hollywood movies.
I also remember Doc T having to run through a hail of sniper bullets to just to get to work one day.....or was that someone else?
Hospital security is what you pay for.....I'll take the job, at $500 a day
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"The Spartans do not ask how many are the enemy, but where they are."
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Team Sergeant is offline
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03-29-2008, 11:51
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#5
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Colorado Springs
Posts: 4,534
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SS, good job on recognizing a viable threat, and taking the steps necessary to be able to protect yourself instead of relying on others! The surgeon that tried to save the two girls killed in the New Life Church shooting came to the gun club of which I am a member a week after the shooting, bought a gun, and took the CCW course they offer. He said the incident made him realize how weak security can be (especially at his hospital), and wanted to be able to protect himself if need be.
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Razor is offline
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03-29-2008, 12:01
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#6
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Wherever my ruck finds itself
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Team Sergeant
I remember Doc T being in the hospital with a prisoner on the loose..... found him in the air duct if I remember correctly...
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I was there that day. He had a .22 pistol as well that security missed when he was brought in. I am not sure if they ever figured out where he got the gun (family or it was stashed in the ceiling tiles).
We had many colorful evening in that ER...and quite a few in the parking lot and on the EMS ramp as well. I seem to remember a guy making his way just inside the trauma OR #17 one night as Dr A was working on a shooting victim. He ended up with a fractured R/U, nose, and a few lacs while being kindly escorted back out of the OR by a paramedic I know.  He was transported to jail that night with a soft cast and several staples/stitches. The paramedic however was thanked by being asked to take several days off work to think about what he had done.
I hear it has gotten worse in the past couple years too.
Crip
__________________
"It's better to die on your feet than live on your knees."
"Its not who I am underneath, but what I do that defines me" -Batman
"There are no obstacles, only opportunities for excellence."- NousDefionsDoc
Last edited by Surgicalcric; 03-29-2008 at 12:22.
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Surgicalcric is offline
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03-29-2008, 17:15
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#7
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Guerrilla Chief
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Harrisburg PA
Posts: 864
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Surgicalcric
The paramedic however was thanked by being asked to take several days off work to think about what he had done.
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Let me guess: Without pay, right???
Never been an ER doc/medic (tho I've been mistaken for Anthony Edwards several times), but I've been an ER patient a lot. Some of those places can be pretty interesting to say the least.
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So let me fill my children's hearts
With heroes tales and hope it starts
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With no vain sighs for moments gone
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Monsoon65 is offline
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03-29-2008, 17:49
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#8
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Area Commander
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: UK
Posts: 2,952
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After all of that, you still had to deal with pathogens that you could not treat with antibiotics., etc., etc. There were times when I considered wearing chain mail and a body condom.
RF 1
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Red Flag 1 is offline
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03-29-2008, 18:38
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#9
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 554
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Seek Cover
I by no means am the likes of you more educated medical professionals, but I do still try and keep up my skills. About 2 months ago here in Moore County, NC I was on a call that brought me to a rural area of Vass in which we were told it was a suicide attempt. On arrival at the scene we find out that the individual ran into the woods with a rifle and had a history of mental illness. Looking at the rather out of shape officers on scene I began to ask the family questions that obviously had been overlooked. First of all being a Paramedic, if the scene is not safe we were not suppose to be called in, but there we were. I asked the family if this gentleman was an avid hunter?, what type of rifle is it?, is the rifle scoped?, how long has he been gone from the house?, where is his usual layup when out hunting the family land?, and does he fill threatened around authority? Now being in the role of Paramedic, I began to get strange looks as these should have been law enforcement questions. We have had to detain, wrestle, threaten and even put a very large patient out of a moving ambulance all to cover for each other. The threat to medical providers is very real. I very much agree that one must exercise care when dealing with patients in various environments.
Psalms 59:2 "Deliver me from the workers of iniquity, and save me from bloody men".
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Dragbag036 is offline
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03-29-2008, 18:52
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#10
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Flagstaff, AZ
Posts: 315
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All of this is the reason I am looking into the purchase of IBA for my medics in the field. Small community, not a lot of violence, but the potential is always there. In the last week I can count four instances when my crews would have had to wear IBA for a stage for suicidal/combative patient and they would have been in the right.
Was at Ft Sam when a guy went into Beach Pavillion, onto the Surgical Intensive care ward to "finish off" a guy he had shot earlier. Thank God they had a panic lock down button that isolated the ward. MP's caught the guy in the parking lot after he couldn't get in.
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adal is offline
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03-29-2008, 18:53
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#11
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 20,929
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Surgicalcric
I was there that day. He had a .22 pistol as well that security missed when he was brought in. I am not sure if they ever figured out where he got the gun (family or it was stashed in the ceiling tiles).
I hear it has gotten worse in the past couple years too.
Crip
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It's gotten worse only because of the morons running that hospital.....
You should have been there the day "security" had Doc T's car towed for being parked in the "Law Enforcement Only" parking spot!
Head of hospital security was soon hiding in the same air duct
as the last bad guy.....
BTW Dr. A is doing well...
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"The Spartans do not ask how many are the enemy, but where they are."
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Team Sergeant is offline
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03-29-2008, 23:04
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#12
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Area Commander
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: The Black Hills of SD
Posts: 5,944
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I agree 100%, about hospital security being lax. Of the 20 plus hospitals here in the Denver Metro area, I only know of 1 that has a full time armed LEO presence. All the others have that wonderful  HSS security, and only a few of those "officers" carry Tasers.
Guns v. Blades
Here's something that happened to me not too long ago. Got called to a Mental Health Facility downtown, for a kid off his meds, hearing voices and "seeing" things, on a M-1 hold needing to go to Denver General, to be medically cleared for placement.
We roll up and find the Pt. with the staff member already waiting for us outside. There is no PD on scene. My medic and I walk up and start to get the report. 18 y/o kid, homeless, Hx of Psych behavior and off his Meds for the past 3 weeks. Stated he's been hearing voices, telling him to hurt himself. The Pt. was cooperative and willing to go into DG.
So we walk over to the ambulance and before we get in, I ask if the Pt. if he has anything on him I need to know about, and if he could empty his pockets for me. The "staff" member comes up and says, he's already been searched. I look at her and tell her, "That I'd like to to it for myself.....I'm funny that way." I get a "Humph" from the staff member and ask the kid to pull his shirt out of his waist band, and to just turn around for me. Seeing nothing, I ask him to empty his pockets on the step into the rig.
He pulls out a wallet, some papers, a few other nick nack stuff, a cigarette lighter and 2 boxes of cigarettes. I pick one box up, shake it and hear a couple of cigarettes inside. Open it and confirm, that there are indeed 2 cigarettes in there. I pick up the 2nd box and shake it, feeling it somewhat full. I open it, and see that it's about 3/4 of the way full. But something inside caught my eye. There was a partially smoked cigarette in there, (you could tell by the yellow on the filter). Call it, my spidy senses started tingling, or I felt a disturbance in the force, but I pulled out that partially smoked cigarette and found, that this kid emptied the tobacco out of the cigarette, then had taken a wooden dowel rod, (the thickness of a cigarette) about 2 inches long, and had taken a razor blade off of, what looked like a disposable razor, and stuck one end of the razor, into one end of the dowel, and then placed it back into the emptied cigarette. He made himself a nice "slashing" weapon.
I looked over at the staff member, the one that told me he was searched, and just gave her a look of, "Riiiiiiight", while showing her this kids "weapon". I ask the Pt. if he has anything more on him I need to know about, and he tells me he doesn't.
We put his stuff in a plastic bag and get him loaded up and buckled in on our cot, and instead of sitting next to him on our "work bench", I take up a position directly behind him in our "Captain's chair", keeping an eye on him the whole way to the HSP.
We get to DG and walk into the ED, and are met by the HSS security people who announce either Medical or Psych, alerting either the charge nurse or the psych nurse. The HSS guy comes over and asks the Pt. if he has anything on him, keys, lighter, knives, ect., to which I hold up the plastic bag and show him what I found, but he my want to call up one of the S.O.'s from downstairs, or if there's a DPD officer available to come up and search this guy further. The HSS guy asks "Why?", and I tell him because I found a cleverly disguised blade on him, and I show him the "cigarette blade" I found. HSS guys eyes got as big as saucers, and he walks over to a phone and makes a call.
The Psych nurse arrives and I give her my hand off report and tell her about the blade I found, and that I already told the HSS guy to place a call, for one of the S.O.'s to come up. So we take the Pt. down to the Psych ED and put him in a room just as the S.O. gets there, and I show him the "Cigarette blade", and he concurs that a more detailed search is needed.
I walk out, and up to the front desk, to finish my report. I'm there for awhile and the S.O. that did the search, comes walking up to me and tells me, that he found another razor, an older style single blade razor, in it's protective cardboard, taped to the bottom of his foot. Not his shoe, but the sole of his foot.
Needless to say, I don't care if a staff member, family member, RN, Doc, or even PD says a Pt. I'm about to transport has been searched, I'm going to preform my own search. Like Reagan told Gorbachev........."Trust, But Verify."
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Sdiver is offline
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03-30-2008, 18:46
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#13
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Wherever my ruck finds itself
Posts: 2,972
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Team Sergeant
It's gotten worse only because of the morons running that hospital.....
BTW Dr. A is doing well... 
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It was as bad as it was, at the time we worked there, because of the administration. I can only imagine now.
Thanks for the update on A. Does Doc T talk much with Dr Rick M?
Dragbag, I have had some of the same experiences working at the FD and at EMS. There were several of us who had enough forethought to purchase concealable armor circa '94. Many of my coworkers at EMS laughed at me sweating in it, until the first shooting incident claiming the career of one of my partners. It has saved my skin on a couple of occasions. The EMS service where I worked issues armor now in a bright blue outer carrier. They are nice but I still prefer my concealable carrier and will be purchasing a new one once I return from here.
Crip
__________________
"It's better to die on your feet than live on your knees."
"Its not who I am underneath, but what I do that defines me" -Batman
"There are no obstacles, only opportunities for excellence."- NousDefionsDoc
Last edited by Surgicalcric; 03-30-2008 at 19:48.
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Surgicalcric is offline
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03-30-2008, 19:21
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#14
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Guerrilla
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Free Pennsylvania
Posts: 138
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Hospital Security
SS,
Any off the record advice for the student/resident in the ED? Run fast???
As a side note- within the last few months our little on campus gun free housing next door to the ED long considered in a safe zone has had two break-ins when people where clearly home and nothing was stolen even with laptops sitting out. The first intruder tried to break down the occupied BEDROOM door of a student COUPLE, the other incident resulted in a female student being assaulted in her room.
I choose not to rely on security.
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Patriot007 is offline
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03-30-2008, 22:33
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#15
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 20,929
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Surgicalcric
It was as bad as it was, at the time we worked there, because of the administration. I can only imagine now.
Thanks for the update on A. Does Doc T talk much with Dr Rick M?
Crip
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We got the XMAS card from Doc M a few months ago! I'm not sure how much they talk now.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Patriot007
SS,
I choose not to rely on security.
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As I said, you get what you pay for....
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Team Sergeant is offline
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