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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMan Dies After Waiting Hours For ER To Treat His Rash
A Bronx man who went to Saint Barnabas Hospital to get his rash checked out was found dead in the emergency room waiting room after an eight hour wait. John Verrier, 30, went to St. Barnabas at 10 p.m. last Sunday night; he was found dead by a security guard around 6:40 a.m. the next day. "He was found stiff, blue and cold," a hospital employee told ABC News. "He died because [there's] not enough staff to take care of the number of patients we see each day. We need more staff at Saint Barnabas."
Verrier had his vitals taken when he first got to the hospital, then told to wait for a doctor to see him. Hospital spokesman Steve Clark told the Post that Verrier's name was called "two or three times" between his arrival and 2 a.m. A security guard passed through the waiting room around 2 a.m. to wake up the many homeless people who sleep there, and Verrier was "moving, he was alive." Then when the security guard passed again around 6 a.m., he was dead.
Clark added that an in-house review found all guidelines were met. But the hospital worker who spoke to ABC said nobody was really checking on him: "There's no policy in place to check the waiting room to see if people waiting to be seen are still there or still alive." That worker says Verrier's name was called over the PA three times, but "based on number of people in the waiting room it is impossible to check on each person physically."
New York State is ranked 46th in the country in overall emergency room waiting time. St. Barnabas is the worst in the city when it comes to the average time patients spent in the emergency room before being sent home: it's 306 minutes there, compared to a 155 minute wait statewide and the average 137 minute wait nationally.
http://gothamist.com/2014/01/26/man_complaining_of_rash_found_dead.php?utm_source=Gothamist+Daily&utm_campaign=89dce47557-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_73240544d8-89dce47557-584073
TwilightGardener
(46,416 posts)to tell staff that he went unresponsive? They couldn't have sent someone out there when he didn't respond to PA calls? Amazing.
Warpy
(110,913 posts)In which case the hospital is going to have a whole lot more problems than it ever thought of.
Anaphylaxis would have come with obvious, noisy trouble breathing and it is horrible to listen to, so someone would have complained.
I know what those waiting areas are like. You don't know who's a patient, who's family, and who just came in out of the cold. A walkaound by the triage person would be a good idea, standard for the hospital floors is every two hours.
Obviously, some procedures will have to change. For what it's worth, it's beyond cruel to kick homeless people out for the coldest part of the night.
immoderate
(20,885 posts)And the ironies pile up that if someone does not respond, there is no one to check if they're still alive.
--imm
anasv
(225 posts)never mind from being actually sick.
The triage people are terrible. There is nothing in place except they see people first come first serve, regardless of the severity of symptoms, and with no haste to process people into care promptly.