Mass shooting tests Las Vegas hospitals with surge of more than 400 patients
Hospital Safety Insider, October 2, 2017
Want to receive articles like this one in your inbox? Subscribe to Hospital Safety Insider!
Moments after shots rang out along the iconic Las Vegas strip Sunday night, sending thousands of concertgoers scrambling for cover, the city’s hospitals sprang into action.
Dignity Health-St. Rose Dominican Hospital treated more than 50 people across its three campuses; the city’s only Level 1 trauma center, University Medical Center, treated another 100 people; and Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center—the trauma center located closest to the strip—treated more than 175 patients, according to a statement from the American Hospital Association (AHA).
“With at least 58 people killed and more than 400 taken to area hospitals with injuries, this tragedy painfully reminds us why violence is now viewed as one of the major public health and safety issues throughout the country,” said AHA Chairman Gene Woods, MBA, MHA, FACHE, president and CEO of Carolinas HealthCare System based in Charlotte, North Carolina, in a statement. “Like all of you, my heart is heavy and my thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families. My mind is also focused on our colleagues in Las Vegas who are working tirelessly in an overwhelming, mass casualty situation to provide life-saving support to those in need.”
Those colleagues undoubtedly faced a gruesome scene overnight. In its own statement, Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center said 14 of the patients it treated had died. About 30 surgeries had been performed at the site—thus far.
“This has been an unprecedented response to an unprecedented tragedy,” Sunrise CEO Todd Sklamberg, MBA, said in the statement. “Our trauma team and all supporting nursing units, critical care areas and ancillary services are all at work this morning in the aftermath of this tragedy—and most stayed throughout the night—to help the victims and to assist their loved ones.”
Want to receive articles like this one in your inbox? Subscribe to Hospital Safety Insider!
Related Products
Most Popular
- Articles
-
- Practice the six rights of medication administration
- Note similarities and differences between HCPCS, CPT® codes
- Don’t forget the three checks in medication administration
- Complications from immobility by body system
- Differentiate between types of wound debridement
- OB services: Coding inside and outside of the package
- What does case-mix index mean to you?
- Know guidelines and subtle differences in code descriptions for laceration repairs
- Rapid cycle improvement
- Reimbursement for Facility and Professional Services in a Provider-Based Department by Gina M. Reese, Esq., RN
- E-mailed
-
- Avoid Eyewash-Related Regulatory Compliance Issues
- CMS clarifies rules on texting patient info
- Q&A: A little more on texting PHI
- Clearing up the confusion: CPT codes 76376 and 76377
- Avoid the common pitfalls of consolidated billing
- Patient Safety Strategies: Building a Fall Prevention Toolkit
- Part 2: ECRI's top tech hazards list 2018
- Five keys to creating a CHF disease management program
- Consider two options for coding Rho(D) immune globulin given in pregnancy
- Communication strategies for nurse leaders
- Searched