Trained for Trauma Care
January 12, 2016
黑料传送门 alumni at Aria Health were well prepared to treat the mass casualties of May's
Amtrak derailment.
by Janice Fisher
鈥淣ot much was going on when my pager went off. The operator said, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e part of
the response team for the derailment.鈥 I asked her to repeat what she鈥檇 said. 鈥楪o
down to the ER and you鈥檒l get instructions,鈥 she told me.鈥
鈥擫indsey Perea, DO 鈥13, general surgery resident
鈥淚鈥檒l never forget my patient: He was covered from head to toe in soot, even his eyelashes.
I was trying to get his clothes off and choking on soot. He was barely conscious ... Today,
when I smell dirt, I think of him.鈥
鈥擩ulia Todd, DO 鈥13, combined emergency medicine and family practice resident
鈥淭he first woman patient had a hole in her lower abdomen. She was covered in dirt.
Her rib cage on the left side looked like it was inside out ... She had so many injuries.
She was the sickest person I ever saw who lived.鈥
鈥擩onathan M. Schwadron, DO 鈥08, attending physician, emergency medicine
鈥淭he patients had such traumatic, devastating injuries. Yet they complained about
nothing鈥攖hey were shell-shocked, in such fear.鈥
鈥擫indsey Roach, DO 鈥10, general surgery resident
Amtrak鈥檚 Northeast Regional train no. 188 from Washington, D.C., to New York鈥攖he busiest
stretch of rail in North America鈥攄erailed and crashed in Philadelphia on May 12, 2015,
at 9:23 p.m., about 15 minutes after it had departed from 30th Street Station. More
than 200 of the train鈥檚 passengers were treated at seven area hospitals. Eleven sustained
critical injuries; eight would not survive.
The hospital closest to the crash site, about a mile and a half away, was the 115-bed
Aria Health鈥揊rankford Campus鈥攏ot a trauma center, and so under normal circumstances
not a location that would receive such patients, and certainly not in such a short
time frame and in such numbers. Aria鈥揊rankford treated 36 injured passengers in a
few brief hours that night. Among the doctors providing care were several Philadelphia
College of Osteopathic Medicine residents, a 黑料传送门-trained attending physician, a 黑料传送门
alumna, and a 黑料传送门 faculty member.
Some were in the midst of their shifts at Aria鈥揊rankford when the accident occurred
and were astonished to find themselves, with virtually no notice, in the midst of
a mass casualty at a community hospital. Several had begun the evening not at work,
but celebrating a colleague鈥檚 birthday at a bowling alley. Among the latter group
was Rob Danoff, DO, 黑料传送门 clinical professor of family medicine and program director
of Aria Health鈥檚 combined family medicine/emergency medicine residency. When Dr. Danoff
learned about the derailment, he called Gerald Wydro, MD, the chairman of emergency
medicine for Aria Health, and confirmed that Aria needed assistance. He asked the
residents who were with him, 鈥淲ho here can help?鈥 Everyone, he says, raised their
hands. Some went to the Aria鈥揟orresdale facility, about eight miles from Aria鈥揊rankford;
Torresdale is a designated Level 2 Regional Resource Trauma Center. Others, including
Dr. Danoff, went to Aria鈥揊rankford.
Julia Todd, DO 鈥13
Julia Todd, DO 鈥13, working in Aria鈥揊rankford鈥檚 intensive care unit that night, had
been treating a critically ill patient. So when 鈥渟omeone came in with a look on his
face, I thought something had happened to my patient.鈥 Moments later, she was shocked
to hear 鈥淐ode Yellow鈥 over the hospital鈥檚 public address system. Since she is a combined
emergency medicine/family medicine resident, she went downstairs to the ER, along
with an ICU nurse, because she knew the ER would be lightly staffed.
In the ER, Dr. Todd joined four residents and two attending physicians. 鈥淭he nurse
manager was getting the scoop from the field about who would be coming to us, but
information was limited. Attendings were clearing out the ER as best as possible,
dealing with patients who were ambulatory. Then we heard the sirens.鈥
The residents asked each other, 鈥淲hat should we be doing?鈥 They decided to stand where
the ambulances would pull up, and to take patients in order of arrival. 鈥淲e did triage,
stabilized them, and got in line again. This all happened fast鈥攚ithin 10 or 15 minutes
after the sirens.鈥 Dr. Todd recalls waiting with her colleagues in the emergency bay,
鈥渉eart pounding, not knowing what to expect. We鈥檙e near Interstate 95, so we get some
high-acuity trauma. But Frankford isn鈥檛 a trauma hospital, and the volume was overwhelming.鈥
The patient who had arrived coated in soot was barely conscious. 鈥淎 nurse and I took
care of him, getting him settled and onto pain meds so that we could leave him and
he could be scanned for injuries,鈥 says Dr. Todd. The scans revealed multiple rib
fractures, and fractures of the cervical spine, as well as lacerations, abrasions,
and bruises. Most notably, he had a scalp 鈥渄egloving鈥 injury: his scalp was coming
off. 鈥淭wo surgery residents [Lindsey Perea, DO 鈥13, and Lindsey Roach, DO 鈥10] and
I cleaned out his scalp and pulled it back together.鈥 Along with Dr. Todd鈥檚 next patient,
who also had multiple injuries, the stabilized victim was transferred to Aria鈥揟orresdale.
As Dr. Todd worked, she became aware that 鈥渢he phones were ringing nonstop, with doctors
on the other end. Doctors poured in, and nurses, residents, people not on the work
schedule, even SPD units [Sterile Processing Departments] offering supplies.鈥 After
the severely injured patients came 鈥渢he walking wounded, who were piled into paddy
wagons,鈥 followed by 鈥渁 lot of people who were banged up.鈥
Around midnight, recalls Dr. Todd, accident victims stopped arriving. She went back
to the ICU to finish her shift.
鈥淧art of our emergency training is for disaster, and it鈥檚 on our boards every year,鈥
says Dr. Todd. 鈥淏ut I never thought I鈥檇 see it in my life, especially so early in
my career.
鈥淚 was comfortable that our faculty in ER is strong and our resident training is strong.
It all worked seamlessly. We all deal with trauma, so we applied what we know on a
bigger scale.鈥
Jonathan M. Schwadron, DO 鈥08
Jonathan M. Schwadron, DO 鈥08, was the attending physician in Aria鈥揊rankford鈥檚 emergency
room on the evening of May 12. He recalls seeing 鈥渁 few police officers around 9 or
9:30. They said there had been a big crash, and I thought, 鈥楾his isn鈥檛 a trauma center.鈥
I figured we鈥檇 get a few folks. But within 15 or 20 minutes we started getting patients.鈥
Dr. Schwadron would spend most of the next few hours at bed 26, with the severely
injured female crash victim who had arrived first in the ER bay. 鈥淪he wasn鈥檛 unconscious;
her GCS [Glasgow Coma Scale] was 7. She was moaning and in discomfort, with low blood
pressure. So the first thing we did was intubate the patient.鈥 Along with two residents,
Dr. Schwadron also inserted a chest tube and central line, and administered blood
products. He talked with the Aria鈥揟orresdale trauma unit about transferring the patient
there. But when X-rays showed pelvic and back fractures, she was transferred to Penn
Presbyterian Medical Center.
The patient would prove to have seven rib fractures, a flail chest, a diaphragm rupture,
serosal injury of the bowel, multiple pelvic fractures, and a lumbar spine fracture.
鈥淲e only knew about some of these injuries,鈥 he notes; 鈥渢he rest were discovered later
in surgery.鈥
Dr. Schwadron subsequently learned that his patient had been discharged. 鈥淚t was nice
to hear that it went well,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 often see the outcome.鈥
During the time that Dr. Schwadron worked on the woman in bed 26, he 鈥渟tepped out
of the room a few times to make sure the rest of the ER wasn鈥檛 falling apart. But
no one freaked out or lost their cool. You knew that you had to hold it together.
And there were countless volunteers鈥攁n ICU resident, two senior surgical people, nurses,
therapists, technicians, respiratory therapists, doctors鈥攕o many people to help.鈥
Lindsey Roach, DO 鈥10
Lindsey Roach, DO 鈥10, now a fellow in surgical critical care at Christiana Care Health
System, in Newark, Delaware, was in her last year of a general surgery residency at
Aria鈥揟orresdale on the evening of May 12. She was one of the residents who had been
out bowling to celebrate a birthday.
She knew that Aria鈥揊rankford would have only one general surgical resident in house
at night, so Dr. Roach drove there first. Her first impression was that the crash
victims 鈥渨ere scared to death. Some were on vacation in a foreign country and had
been separated from their family; they needed consolation. It felt good that we could
help out and that the hospitals where we work could come together.鈥
Dr. Roach treated five patients during the roughly 90 minutes she spent at Aria鈥揊rankford,
primarily helping to repair lacerations. When she arrived later at Aria鈥揟orresdale,
she says, 鈥渢hey had things under control. Everyone came in; it was amazing.
鈥淚 think it was a great night all around,鈥 she says, 鈥渁 tremendous learning experience.
How do you even begin to organize who to help first?鈥 The learning goes beyond logistics,
however. 鈥淪o many doctors were called in鈥攁nd so many went in to help who weren鈥檛 called
in,鈥 notes Dr. Roach. 鈥淭hese people are in the field for the right reasons.鈥
Lindsey Perea, DO 鈥13
Lindsey Perea, DO 鈥13, a surgical resident on staff that night at Aria鈥揊rankford,
remembers a 鈥渧ery surreal鈥 situation, 鈥渆specially for the first forty minutes when
people kept coming. The 鈥榳alking wounded鈥 were missing shoes but wearing suits, and
covered in dirt.
鈥淭wo ER residents and I went over Dr. Schwadron鈥檚 patient with him. She was a Jane
Doe when she arrived, and that was scary鈥攕he was so sick.鈥 Dr. Perea also worked with
Dr. Roach to help Dr. Todd clean out the degloving injury of the man with the complex
scalp laceration. 鈥淪eventy percent of his scalp was hanging off. You can die from
scalp bleeding. He had gravel and dirt between his skull and the wound.
鈥淭he 黑料传送门 program is heavy on trauma,鈥 Dr. Perea notes. 鈥淚 did six months last year
alone. And so I had a good comfort level. We are all ATLS [Advanced Trauma Life Support]
trained.
鈥淥nce Dr. Fusco [Cynthia Fusco, DO 鈥91, director of the trauma program at Aria Health]
arrived from Aria鈥揟orresdale, we took her around to the patients who needed to be
transferred. It was a relief. She was working the phone, walking around and orchestrating
where people would go and how to get them there.鈥
Even though Aria鈥揊rankford lacks the resources of a trauma center, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think
it limited us,鈥 says Dr. Perea. 鈥淲e were still able to provide adequate care. When
people needed more care, we could get them to that facility in a timely fashion. We
knew that we did a great job and had the support of Aria鈥揟orresdale鈥檚 Level 2 Trauma
Center.鈥
Emily Hatke, DO 鈥13
Emily Hatke, DO 鈥13, a second-year emergency medicine resident at Aria鈥揊rankford,
was working a 3 p.m. to midnight shift. She was suturing a patient when a nurse鈥檚
husband鈥攁 police officer鈥攃ame by and said there had been a train accident. 鈥淓ven so,鈥
she recalls thinking, 鈥渧ictims won鈥檛 be coming here. Then I heard it was an Amtrak
train, so I knew that a lot more people were involved. And then I heard that it had
happened at the Frankford railroad junction鈥攁nd I knew that was close by.鈥 When the
鈥淐ode Yellow鈥 was called, Dr. Hatke had never heard it before.
鈥淲e started clearing out all our noncritical patients from the ER. We called Julia
[Todd] and Lindsey [Perea] to ask them to come down to help. We started getting supplies,
and we all lined up at the door to wait.鈥
Dr. Hatke took the third patient to enter the ER bay. 鈥淗e was covered from head to
toe in soot or dirt鈥擨 wasn鈥檛 sure which, because I didn鈥檛 know more about the crash.
He told us he had pain all over, especially in his legs. We took him back and did
a quick rundown: ABCs [airway, breathing, circulation], figuring out the major problems,
stabilizing him.鈥 While Dr. Hatke was suturing the patient, she recounts, 鈥渉e asked,
鈥榃hat city are we in?鈥 He had no idea where he was. Patients were in shock and confused,
or sleeping. They couldn鈥檛 tell us their history.鈥
Dr. Hatke鈥檚 next patient had an open leg fracture, as well as a concussion and lacerations.
He was soon transferred to Penn Presbyterian Medical Center. Such patients would normally
be sent to Aria鈥揟orresdale, 鈥渂ut they were treating other crash victims,鈥 Dr. Hatke
explains.
When Dr. Fusco arrived at Aria鈥揊rankford, says Dr. Hatke, 鈥渁 lot of patients had been
stabilized. But she helped us identify who needed to be admitted and where they should
go. She was on the phones with surgeons at other sites. My patient needed an immediate
operation on his leg; Dr. Fusco lined up a surgeon and an available emergency room.
She was there most of the night, as long as I was there.鈥
Wherever she looked, notes Dr. Hatke, 鈥減eople were doing exactly what they were supposed
to do. And everything seemed very efficient. Nurses and technicians and everyone did
an amazing job. Every patient who came to Frankford survived.鈥
After taking care of three patients, all of whom needed suturing after their CT scans
had been reviewed, Dr. Hatke sat down to write up what she had been doing over the
past few hours. Now that the patients were settled, she was able to obtain more detailed
histories.
Reflecting on her experience, Dr. Hatke says, 鈥淭his is what we鈥檙e trained to do in
emergency medicine. Having kept my calm and taken care of my patients and worked as
a team鈥擨 feel I have a level of preparation that a lot of other residents and attendings
don鈥檛 have. I feel that I鈥檓 able to handle anything in the future.鈥
Rob Danoff, DO
Rob Danoff, DO, clinical professor of family medicine, 黑料传送门, and program director
of Aria Health鈥檚 combined family medicine/emergency medicine residency, found Aria鈥揊rankford
鈥渆erily quiet鈥 when he arrived, but it was also calm. People were in emotional shock.
鈥淚 remember so many people with dirt on them. I talked to a guy who had been in the
second Amtrak car who was hurting all over the place. He remembered that he had been
talking to someone on the train, and then next thing he remembered was a loud noise
and suddenly he was on his side, spitting up dirt in the dark. A woman remembered
hearing that same loud noise and then seeing a man fly by her鈥攁nd she remembered nothing
else until she was walking along the tracks with an emergency responder.鈥
The staff, says Dr. Danoff, was amazing. 鈥淭he nurses, the front desk, security, the
respiratory therapists, people in the lab, X-ray, scribes鈥攅veryone worked together.
We do drills, but this was the real thing.鈥 He also praises Philadelphia鈥檚 first responders:
鈥淭he paramedics, firefighters, police were wonderful. The patients told me how caring
and kind they were.鈥
While the emergency medical and surgical staff were handling the most acute and critical
cases, Dr. Danoff and others dealt with 鈥渇ractures, open wounds, concussions, cleaning
faces and flushing eyes: we all went where we could help best. And we all worked in
teams. In some rooms there were five doctors and several nurses.鈥
Dr. Danoff recalls the pride he felt as he watched Dr. Todd at work on a patient with
Dr. Schwadron. 鈥淛ulia did a terrific job. And Jon was highly professional and very
organized. He led the team and set the tone. Residents reflect the attitude of the
attendings.
鈥淚鈥檝e been a program director for about 20 years,鈥 says Dr. Danoff. 鈥淚 was so proud
of the residents and other staff. It was a horrible tragedy, but there are bright
lights. I walked by each room and watched them. I saw what they were doing and how
well, and how much they cared.鈥
Dr. Danoff concludes that if the experience at Aria鈥揊rankford that night had a theme,
it was teamwork. 鈥淓veryone was working together with the same purpose: to help those
in need and their families to navigate through that horrific event.鈥