TY - JOUR
T1 - Besieged in the Bronx
T2 - Lessons from an in-hospital mass casualty
AU - Chu, Julianne L.
AU - Castaldi, Maria
AU - Bridges, Kristen
AU - O'Driscoll, Kieran M.
AU - Rigdon, Amanda R.
AU - Shayesteh, Ali
AU - Robinson, Sam
AU - Narula, Samir
AU - Vemulapalli, Pratibha
AU - Gilchrist, Brian F.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/11/1
Y1 - 2023/11/1
N2 - BACKGROUND An active shooter in a hospital is an emergency extraordinaire. We report a single institution's response to the largest active shooter mass casualty event in American History. METHODS Review of notification, flow of prioritized patients, and key elements of the day's dynamic after a hospital attack by a lone gunman were commenced. The review includes outcomes on seven victims and assailants. RESULTS "Code Silver"announced: open display of a weapon. Concise, known, and published chain of command implemented. All house staff to the Emergency Department (ED) via text blast. Operating room (OR) notified. Injured to ED, then triaged to OR. Armed NYPD stationed throughout OR. Senior surgeons controlled key triage during attack with flow controlled from the ED and OR control desk. One fatality plus shooter. CONCLUSION Success favors the prepared. The response to attack, readiness of medical personnel, mitigation, and recovery have brought the following recommendations: (1) single entrance access; (2) armed, professional guards at all entrances; (3) camouflage metal detectors; (4) mandatory, recurrent hospital-wide active shooter training, mock, and table top; (5) published physician chain of command; (6) intercom code system known to all hospital personnel indicating a weapon is openly displayed; (7) a "no fly"list of former employees who are prohibited on premises; (8) stop the bleed training with kits on every floor; (9) one voice, one face to disseminate information. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Prognostic and Epidemiological; Level I.
AB - BACKGROUND An active shooter in a hospital is an emergency extraordinaire. We report a single institution's response to the largest active shooter mass casualty event in American History. METHODS Review of notification, flow of prioritized patients, and key elements of the day's dynamic after a hospital attack by a lone gunman were commenced. The review includes outcomes on seven victims and assailants. RESULTS "Code Silver"announced: open display of a weapon. Concise, known, and published chain of command implemented. All house staff to the Emergency Department (ED) via text blast. Operating room (OR) notified. Injured to ED, then triaged to OR. Armed NYPD stationed throughout OR. Senior surgeons controlled key triage during attack with flow controlled from the ED and OR control desk. One fatality plus shooter. CONCLUSION Success favors the prepared. The response to attack, readiness of medical personnel, mitigation, and recovery have brought the following recommendations: (1) single entrance access; (2) armed, professional guards at all entrances; (3) camouflage metal detectors; (4) mandatory, recurrent hospital-wide active shooter training, mock, and table top; (5) published physician chain of command; (6) intercom code system known to all hospital personnel indicating a weapon is openly displayed; (7) a "no fly"list of former employees who are prohibited on premises; (8) stop the bleed training with kits on every floor; (9) one voice, one face to disseminate information. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Prognostic and Epidemiological; Level I.
KW - Mass casualty
KW - automatic weapon
KW - police presence
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85175269351
U2 - 10.1097/TA.0000000000004099
DO - 10.1097/TA.0000000000004099
M3 - Article
C2 - 37545030
AN - SCOPUS:85175269351
SN - 2163-0755
VL - 95
SP - E45-E48
JO - Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery
JF - Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery
IS - 5
ER -