
Psychiatr News December 2, 2005
Volume 40, Number 23, page 5
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
Caring Despite Chaos
As one of two psychiatry residents who stayed at New Orleans' Charity
Hospital during Hurricane Katrina, James Brad McConville, M.D., can look back
on an educational experience few other psychiatrists can claim.
He provided the following account to Psychiatric News and to the
alumni magazine of the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, where he
went to medical school:
"On Sunday [August 28], we saw a massive influx of psychiatric
patients in the psychiatric emergency room as family members started dropping
off the sick before the storm. At the same time, we were trying to discharge
as many people as possible. It was a losing battle, because ethically we
couldn't refuse anyone admission and send them out in the storm.... At the
same time I was unable to open more than 4-6 beds. We admitted maybe 35-40
people that day and discharged about five....It was an extremely frantic, busy
day, but I did follow the storm's progress on CNN, and we knew it was going to
be bad.
"We lost power at 5 a.m. [on Monday, August 29]... .The basement
flooded, and we lost our generators at maybe 9 a.m. After the storm, I went
outside and walked around. There was massive devastation beyond anything I had
personally ever seen, but it was nothing compared to what happened in the
flood....There were tons of rats, everywhere. Apparently they had fled to the
land around the hospital....
"Caring for psychiatric patients during the hurricane was very
stressful and challenging. For starters, many of them didn't want to be in the
hospital at all. Even in the face of an obvious disaster, they wanted out. I
found myself doing a great deal of reality testing and had to run group
therapy sessions dealing with the hurricane. Even when surrounded by six feet
of water, patients were demanding discharge and wanted to swim back to their
homes.
"[S]everal of the severely psychotic patients refused to take
medications altogether. Normally we have a policy for instituting forced meds,
but it involves a thorough psychiatric evaluation by two independent staff
psychiatrists followed by thorough documentation for legal reasons. At that
point, we would give forced injections until they improved. Obviously with no
staff, we couldn't do any of that so it broke down. The nursing staff didn't
feel comfortable giving forced injections of Haldol every few hoursit
was always pitch dark in the hallways, we were understaffed, and it just
wasn't safe. I respected and agreed with that, and in some cases we simply let
some of the patients remain grossly psychotic, and we focused on keeping them
safe.
"In another case, I had a suicidal patient with diabetes and other
medical problems who decided not to eat in hopes of killing herself.... In the
end, the nurses and I spent hours a day just talking to her. I suspended all
insulin in fear she would become hypoglycemic. After 3-4 days, the wonderful
caring nurses on that unit talked her into eating something...."
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