Woman dies in ER lobby as 911 refuses to help

Users who are viewing this thread

GraceAbounds

Well-Known Member
Messages
6,998
Reaction score
2
Tokenz
0.00z
Woman dies in ER lobby
as 911 refuses to help
Tapes show operators ignored pleas to send ambulance to L.A. hospital
The Associated Press
Updated: 8:43 a.m. CT June 13, 2007

function UpdateTimeStamp(pdt) { var n = document.getElementById("udtD"); if(pdt != '' && n && window.DateTime) { var dt = new DateTime(); pdt = dt.T2D(pdt); if(dt.GetTZ(pdt)) {n.innerHTML = dt.D2S(pdt,(('false'.toLowerCase()=='false')?false:true));} } } UpdateTimeStamp('633173425980200000');
LOS ANGELES - A woman who lay bleeding on the emergency room floor of a troubled inner-city hospital died after 911 dispatchers refused to contact paramedics or an ambulance to take her to another facility, newly released tapes of the emergency calls reveal.
Edith Isabel Rodriguez, 43, died of a perforated bowel on May 9 at Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital. Her death was ruled accidental by the Los Angeles County coroner’s office.
Relatives said Rodriguez was bleeding from the mouth and writhing in pain for 45 minutes while she was at a hospital waiting area. Experts have said she could have survived had she been treated early enough.
County and state authorities are now investigating Rodriguez’s death. Relatives reported she died as police were wheeling her out of the hospital after the officers they had asked to help Rodriguez arrested her instead on a parole violation. Sheriff’s Department spokesman Duane Allen said Wednesday that the investigation is ongoing.
In the recordings of two 911 calls that day, first obtained by the Los Angeles Times under a California Public Records Act request, callers pleaded for help for Rodriguez but were referred to hospital staff instead.
“I’m in the emergency room. My wife is dying and the nurses don’t want to help her out,” Rodriguez’s boyfriend, Jose Prado, is heard saying in Spanish through an interpreter on the tapes.
“What’s wrong with her?” a female dispatcher asked.
“She’s vomiting blood,” Prado said.
“OK, and why aren’t they helping her?” the dispatcher asked.
‘They’re just watching her’
“They’re watching her there and they’re not doing anything. They’re just watching her,” Prado said.
The dispatcher told Prado to contact a doctor and then said paramedics wouldn’t pick her up because she was already in a hospital. She later told him to contact county police officers at a security desk.
A second 911 call was placed eight minutes later by a bystander who requested that an ambulance be sent to take Rodriguez to another hospital for care.
“She’s definitely sick and there’s a guy that’s ignoring her,” the woman told a male dispatcher.
During the call, the dispatcher argued with the woman over whether there really was an emergency.
“I cannot do anything for you for the quality of the hospital. ... It is not an emergency. It is not an emergency ma’am,” he said.
“You’re not here to see how they’re treating her,” the woman replied.
The dispatcher refused to call paramedics and told the woman that she should contact hospital supervisors “and let them know” if she is unhappy.
‘May God strike you too’
“May God strike you too for acting the way you just acted,” the woman said finally.
“No, negative ma’am, you’re the one,” he said.
The incident was the latest high-profile lapse at King-Harbor, formerly known as King/Drew. The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors is investigating claims of recent patient care breakdowns, including Rodriguez’s case.
Federal inspectors last week said emergency room patients were in “immediate jeopardy” of harm or death, and King-Harbor was given 23 days to shape up or risk losing federal funding.
‘Fundamentally a failure of caring’
Dr. Bruce Chernof, director of the county Department of Health Services, which oversees the facility, has called Rodriguez’s death “inexcusable” and said it was “important to understand that this was fundamentally a failure of caring.” He has said conditions are improving, though.
A call Wednesday seeking comment about the 911 tapes from the department’s communications office, which handles information about the hospital, was not immediately returned.
Dr. Roger Peeks, the chief medical officer at the hospital, was placed on “ordered absence” Monday, the Times reported. Health officials declined to elaborate, saying it was a personnel matter. Dr. Robert Splawn, chief medical officer for the health department, was named interim chief medical officer, the newspaper said.
© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
var url=location.href;var i=url.indexOf('/did/') + 1;if(i==0){i=url.indexOf('/print/1/') + 1;}if(i==0){i=url.indexOf('&print=1');}if(i>0){url = url.substring(0,i);document.write('<p>URL: <a href=&quot;'+url+'&quot;>'+url+'</a></p>');if(window.print){window.print()}else{alert('To print his page press Ctrl-P on your keyboard \nor choose print from your browser or device after clicking OK');}}URL: Woman dies in ER lobby as 911 refuses to help - More Health News - MSNBC.com
:eek:o:confused
 
  • 14
    Replies
  • 295
    Views
  • 0
    Participant count
    Participants list

White2000GT

Active Member
Messages
3,314
Reaction score
0
Tokenz
0.00z
That is insane! I hate to say it because I don't think lawsuits are always worthwhile, but this is one instance where the lawsuits should be filed in abundance. It is so sad that this woman died because of that level of neglect.
 

dt3

Back By Unpopular Demand
Messages
24,161
Reaction score
0
Tokenz
0.21z
If she was in a hospital...where did they want an ambulance to take her???
 

Maulds

Accidental Bastard
Messages
10,330
Reaction score
3
Tokenz
0.01z
So they figured maybe she wasnt insured so they ignored her...that it? What a fucked up world we live in.:mad
 

drb

Active Member
Messages
1,400
Reaction score
0
Tokenz
0.00z
i find it sad that they have to threaten to cut hospital funding to ensure that patients recieve the care they should. this truely is tragic
 

Veronica

The OG
Valued Contributor
Messages
31,408
Reaction score
108
Tokenz
317.00z
I can see both sides to this...

Its a tragic way for a woman to die.. The hospital is the ones at fault, not the dispatcher.. For one, The Hospitals ALSO have radios and there are typically ambulances at the hospitals.... As far as for the dispatcher.. Hell, I dunno.. I dunno what I would of done in the situation.. We send ambulances to hospitals all the time, so I dont know what went wrong there..

may she RIP and I hope her family gets alot of money from the hospital.. Sounds more like a neglect case of the hospitals.
 

GuesSAngel

Well-Known Member
Messages
17,434
Reaction score
0
Tokenz
0.00z
I wonder how the hospital is supposed to "shape up" in the next 20 some days....hope no one else dies in the ER?
 

GraceAbounds

Well-Known Member
Messages
6,998
Reaction score
2
Tokenz
0.00z
This story just made me sick. The lack of medical care and the lack of just plain caring failed on so many levels. And a woman is dead because of it. It makes me physically ill to think of it. Imagine the pain she went through, laying there dying, people all around, no one doing anything. Imagine her husband and how helpless he felt as he called frantically for people in the hospital to help her, as he called 911 to come and help her, as he stood there and watched the love of his life die right before his eyes ... and no one did anything.

It's sick. It truly is.
 

Mrs Behavin

Well-Known Member
Messages
20,411
Reaction score
0
Tokenz
0.55z
In the ER I work at, they have "levels" for people that walk in to be seen. There is a level 2, which means your oxygen sats are very low, having a heart attack, deformity of a ligament, etc. There is a level 3, which means abd pain, chest pain, etc. There is a level 4, which means like you need stitches, dog bites, headaches, etc. Then there is a level 5, which means that you do not need to be in the ER, like toothaches, refill on your meds, etc and the triage nurse will send you to your dr or the express care clinic. It is not a first come, first seen basis. If you have been waiting in the waiting room for an hr because you have a headache and someone walks in bent over having a heart attack, then the one with heart attack symptoms is going to go back first. People get really upset over that. Everyone always things that their problem is more severe than anyone elses.
The hospital I work at is a not-for profit hospital so it doesnt matter if you have insurance or not, they dont turn people away because of that.
I have also seen people call from the waiting room phone for an ambulance to take them to another hospital because it was taking too long and the ambulance comes too.
 
78,874Threads
2,185,387Messages
4,959Members
Back
Top