Unknown News
"Freedom is
the fundamental
human right.
"
  We have unique bumper stickers, lapel pins, books and surprises!
This week's Unknown News  &  dialogue with our readers
About us  |  Archives  |  Contact us  |  Guidelines  |  Index  |  Mystery links  |  Stickers & pins & stuff  |

If you like what we do,
please
help us do it.


Katrina: A criminal catastrophe
 
Earlier:  New Orleans doctors had to kill their patients
New Orleans hospital staff "debated euthanizing patients"

by Kathleen Johnston, Cable News Network

Oct. 13, 2005

Three days after Hurricane Katrina flooded New Orleans, staff members at the city's Memorial Medical Center had repeated discussions about euthanizing patients they thought might not survive the ordeal, according to a doctor and nurse manager who were in the hospital at the time.

The Louisiana attorney general's office is investigating allegations that mercy killings occurred and has requested that autopsies be performed on all 45 bodies taken from the hospital after the storm.

Orleans Parish coroner Frank Minyard said investigators have told him they think euthanasia may have been committed.

"They thought someone was going around injecting people with some sort of lethal medication," Minyard said.

Dr. Bryant King, who was working at Memorial when conditions were at their worst, told CNN that while he did not witness any acts of euthanasia, "most people know something happened that shouldn't have happened."

Over the course of several weeks, CNN spoke with staff members from Memorial, who recounted the dismal situation inside the hospital after levees protecting New Orleans were breached on Monday, August 29, and most of the city filled up with water. By Wednesday, the situation had become desperate.

"We weren't really functioning as a hospital but as a shelter," King said. "We had no electricity. There was no water. It was hot. People are dying. We thought it was as bad as it could get. Why weren't we being evacuated? That was our biggest thing. We should be gone right now."

Food was running low, sanitation wasn't working, and temperatures inside soared to 110 degrees. Floodwaters had isolated the hospital, where about 312 patients -- many of them critically ill -- were being treated when Katrina hit.

Hospital officials said as many as 11 patients had died before the hurricane, their bodies placed in the morgue. Family members of patients and staff filled the hospital, taxing the dwindling resources.

No one knew when rescuers would arrive. Without power to operate medical devices, staff could only provide basic care. Evacuations were sporadic -- an occasional boat or helicopter picking up patients.

"It was battle conditions," said Fran Butler, a nurse manager. "It was as bad as being out in the field."

The staff was desperate, Butler said.

"My nurses wanted to know what was the plan? Did they say to put people out of their misery? Yes. ... They wanted to know how to get them out of their misery," she said.

Butler also told CNN that a doctor approached her at one point and discussed the subject of putting patients to sleep, and "made the comment to me on how she was totally against it and wouldn't do it."

Butler said she did not see anyone perform a mercy killing, and she said because of her personal beliefs, she would never have participated.

She also said hospital staff "put their heart and souls into patients, whether that patient lived or died."

But King said he is convinced the discussion of euthanasia was more than talk. He said another doctor came to him at 9 a.m. Thursday and recounted a conversation with a hospital administrator and a third doctor who suggested patients be put out of their misery.

King said that the second physician -- who opposed mercy killing -- told him that "this other [third] doctor said she'd be willing to do it."

About three hours later, King said, the second-floor triage area where he was working was cleared of everyone except patients, a second hospital administrator and two doctors, including the physician who had first raised the question of mercy killing.

King said the administrator asked those who remained if they wanted to join in prayer -- something he said had not occurred at the hospital since Katrina ripped through the city.

One of the physicians then produced a handful of syringes, King said.

"I don't know what's in the syringes. ... The only thing I heard the physician say was, 'I'm going to give you something to make you feel better,' " King said.

"I don't know what the physician was going to give them, but we hadn't been given medications like that, to make people feel better, or any sort of palliative care," he said. "We hadn't been doing that up to this point."

King said he decided he would have no part of what he believed was about to happen. He grabbed his bag to leave. He said one of the doctors hugged him.

King said he doesn't know what happened next. He boarded a boat and left the hospital.

Earlier this month, investigators from the attorney general's office visited King and asked him to recount his story.

The coroner said the attorney general's office has requested autopsies but, because of the condition of the bodies, it may be difficult to determine why so many patients died at Memorial.

Tenet Healthcare, the company that owns Memorial, told CNN that most of the 45 patients who died were critically ill.

Tenet said about 11 patients had died the weekend before the hurricane and were placed in the morgue.

Twenty-four of the dead had been patients of an acute care facility known as LifeCare that rented space inside Memorial.

But King said he finds it hard to understand how that many patients could have died at the hospital, even under such grim conditions.

"There was only one patient that died overnight," he said. "The previous day, there were only two. From Thursday to Friday, for there to be 10 times that many, just doesn't make sense to me."

During the past several weeks, CNN has reached the three people who King said were in the second floor area with him.

The hospital administrator told CNN, "I don't recall being in a room with patients or saying a prayer," later adding that King must be lying.

The doctor King identified as having first broached the subject of euthanasia with him declined to talk to the media.

The doctor King alleged held the syringes spoke by phone with CNN on several occasions, emphasizing how everyone inside the hospital felt abandoned.

"[We] did everything humanly possible to save these patients," the doctor told CNN. "The government totally abandoned us to die. In the houses, in the streets, in the hospitals. ... Maybe a lot of us made mistakes, but we made the best decisions we could at the time."

When told about King's allegations, this doctor declined to comment either way.

In a statement e-mailed to CNN, Steven Campanini, a spokesman for Tenet, for said that "in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the physicians and staff at Memorial Medical Center performed heroically to save the lives of their patients under incredibly difficult circumstances.

"About 2,000 patients, families, physicians and staff were safely evacuated from the hospital by boat and helicopter during a continuous evacuation that began Wednesday morning, August 31, and was completed by Friday, September 2," Campanini said.

"We understand that the Louisiana attorney general is investigating all deaths that occurred at New Orleans hospitals and nursing homes after the hurricane, and we fully support and are cooperating with him."

LifeCare, the long-term acute care facility that rented space at Memorial, also e-mailed a statement to CNN.

"LifeCare employees at Memorial Medical Center during that week exhibited heroism under the most difficult of circumstances. ... LifeCare is not aware of any discussions of involving euthanasia at Memorial Medical Center."

CNN's Jonathan Freed, Sean Callebs and Colleen Kamen contributed to this report.

As originally published

All republished material is copyrighted by its original publisher.

It is reprinted by Unknown News without permission, solely for purposes of criticism, comment, and news reporting, in accordance with the Fair Use Guidelines of copyright material under § 107 of U.S.C. Title 17:

Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include --

(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;

(2) the nature of the copyrighted work;

(3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and

(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.

The fact that a work is unpublished shall not itself bar a finding of fair use if such finding is made upon consideration of all the above factors.



There's much more than this at Unknown News.

 
Commentary:

Why does news about America flow so slowly from Europe? THE DAILY MAIL, a British newspaper, reported about euthanasia during the disaster in New Orleans in September, just a few days after it happened, and American media pretty much ignored the news.

And now, a month and two days later, CNN reports it as rumors, not quite confirmed.

*           *           *
These doctors who killed their patients had a very difficult decision to make, after being abandoned by their government, un-rescued for days. For what they did, these doctors were among the heroes of New Orleans, so I fully expect to see them prosecuted.

Meanwhile, Michael Brown will probably make much more money delivering speeches to applauding Republicans than he made for running FEMA, and preventing people from being rescued in New Orleans.


  =H&HH=

"We weren't really functioning as a hospital but as a shelter," Dr. Bryant King said. "We had no electricity. There was no water. It was hot. People are dying. We thought it was as bad as it could get. Why weren't we being evacuated? That was our biggest thing. We should be gone right now."

Food was running low, sanitation wasn't working, and temperatures inside soared to 110 degrees.

Floodwaters had isolated the hospital, where about 312 patients -- many of them critically ill -- were being treated when Katrina hit.

... No one knew when rescuers would arrive.

Without power to operate medical devices, staff could only provide basic care.

Evacuations were sporadic -- an occasional boat or helicopter picking up patients.

"It was battle conditions," said Fran Butler, a nurse manager. "It was as bad as being out in the field."

The staff was desperate, Butler said.

"My nurses wanted to know what was the plan? Did they say to put people out of their misery? Yes. ... They wanted to know how to get them out of their misery," she said.

Filed under:
Katrina: A criminal catastrophe
The drowning of New Orleans and the federal government's bizarre response




Say it with a bumper sticker
$3 each, or two for $5


Unknown News is made possible in part by
financial and philosophical support from:

Apocalypsopolis, by Ran Prieur
A buttload o' used books
Dave's Blog
Editme editing services
Free State Project
David A. Garrett Jr.
Tino Gonzales
J Mooneyham
Liberty Action News Digest
Michael Moore's documentaries on DVD
Order Out of Chaos
Oreilly-sucks.com
Politics Forum
SourDove.com
Visit the website called HappySysiphus.com
Westgarth Books
Zine World

and by sponsorships,
subscriptions, and donations
from viewers like you.



Latest
Unknown News
Latest
dialogue

Arts, entertainment, and celebrities

Bush administration plays 'terror' for political gain

The business of business:
Work, trade, hoarding, sharing,
and modern-day hunter-gathering

There's something about ChoicePoint

Cops you won't see on TV's Cops

Election fraud:
Quietly undermining democracy

Guantanamo Bay:
We don't need no steenking Constitution

Gulf War Syndrome 2

Health and Science

Is George W. Bush insane?

Is it Pentagon policy
to target reporters?

Inoculating yourself from the lies about Mad Cow Disease

Journalism, media, and propaganda

Katrina: A criminal catastrophe

Lies from the Bush Administration

Life in liberated Iraq

More lies you paid for

The Plame affair:
White House intentionally blew CIA agent's cover

Rapture radicals:
Bush and the Fundamentalists

Secret government in America

Sept. 11, 2001

"Support the troops," they say
(while stabbing soldiers in the back)

Taliban America:
No sex, no drugs, no rock'n'roll ...

Unknown heroes & bums

The Vatican Pedophiles Club

The war at home

War crimes & international law

The war on freedom

White House ordered 9/11 EPA lies

Words of wisdom from America's leaders

Latest
Unknown News
Latest
dialogue



You can help
      We try not to whine too much or too loudly, but we are poor and this site eats a lot of time and especially money.
      Giving just a buck or two can make all the difference and keep Unknown News alive.
      Please donate or subscribe.

           
Talk to Us
Archives
If you have something to say, we'd love to hear from you. Click here for archives of recent editions of Unknown News
1234567890