mysteriew
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There have been a lot of people to blame since Katrina. But there have been a lot hero's too. I thought we might pay tribute to some of the hero's we hear about. From the people who selflessly gave out their own food and water in the shelter's to the hero's who worked rescuing survivors, the doctors and nurses who stayed with their patients to the rescuers who have poured into the disaster area asking only to help.
Post the stories here as you find them.
I am going to start with one that I found about the staff in hospitals and some of the rescuers who came to help.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Disasters always spawn heroes.
On Sept. 11, 2001, many of them wore dark blue uniforms that said FDNY.
On Sept. 1, 2005, many wore hospital scrubs that said MD, RN and EMT. Thousands of health care workers stayed with patients in devastated hospitals after the storm struck. Thousands more rushed in to help.
They are people like Dr. Norman McSwain, a legendary, 68-year-old Tulane University trauma surgeon who on Sept. 1 waded through fetid floodwaters to get out word that thousands of people were trapped in hospitals running out of food and water.
And Dr. Rich Tabor, a 38-year-old Bethlehem, Pa., emergency medicine physician who got partners to cover his shifts and paid $520 out of his own pocket for a plane ticket to Louisiana, where he climbed into an airboat and went door-to-door with rescue workers.
And Barry Albertson Jr., 42, a paramedic from Easton, Pa., who missed his 7-year-old son's first peewee football game to join a caravan of ambulances making the 30-hour trip to New Orleans.
And Dr. Lee Garvey, 48, an emergency room doctor at Carolinas Medical Center who dropped everything to staff a state-of-the-art mobile hospital that provided the only trauma care for seven devastated counties in rural Mississippi.
"We're here because this is what we live to do," Garvey said, "trying to offer something to these people."
http://www.rednova.com/news/health/235915/doctors_emerging_as_heroes_of_katrina/
Post the stories here as you find them.
I am going to start with one that I found about the staff in hospitals and some of the rescuers who came to help.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Disasters always spawn heroes.
On Sept. 11, 2001, many of them wore dark blue uniforms that said FDNY.
On Sept. 1, 2005, many wore hospital scrubs that said MD, RN and EMT. Thousands of health care workers stayed with patients in devastated hospitals after the storm struck. Thousands more rushed in to help.
They are people like Dr. Norman McSwain, a legendary, 68-year-old Tulane University trauma surgeon who on Sept. 1 waded through fetid floodwaters to get out word that thousands of people were trapped in hospitals running out of food and water.
And Dr. Rich Tabor, a 38-year-old Bethlehem, Pa., emergency medicine physician who got partners to cover his shifts and paid $520 out of his own pocket for a plane ticket to Louisiana, where he climbed into an airboat and went door-to-door with rescue workers.
And Barry Albertson Jr., 42, a paramedic from Easton, Pa., who missed his 7-year-old son's first peewee football game to join a caravan of ambulances making the 30-hour trip to New Orleans.
And Dr. Lee Garvey, 48, an emergency room doctor at Carolinas Medical Center who dropped everything to staff a state-of-the-art mobile hospital that provided the only trauma care for seven devastated counties in rural Mississippi.
"We're here because this is what we live to do," Garvey said, "trying to offer something to these people."
http://www.rednova.com/news/health/235915/doctors_emerging_as_heroes_of_katrina/