Five Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital (2 page)

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Authors: Sheri Fink

Tags: #Social Science, #Disease & Health Issues, #True Crime, #Murder, #General, #Disasters & Disaster Relief

BOOK: Five Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital
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Fran Butler—Nurse manager of fourth-floor west and south medical and surgical units
Sandra Cordray—Community relations manager; designated communication leader for Hurricane Katrina
Mary Jo D’Amico—Operating-room nurse manager
Curtis Dosch—Chief financial officer Sean
Fowler—Chief operating officer
L. René Goux—Chief executive officer
David Heikamp—Laboratory director
Father John Marse—Chaplain
Susan Mulderick—Nursing director, head of emergency preparedness committee, designated incident commander for Hurricane Katrina
Karen Wynn—Nurse manager of the intensive care units; head of hospital ethics committee
Eric Yancovich—Plant operations director and part of emergency leadership team
Tenet Corporate Officials
Michael Arvin—Business development director for Texas–Gulf Coast region
Trevor Fetter—President and chief executive officer
Bob Smith—Senior vice president for operations in the Texas–Gulf Coast region
LifeCare
Seventh Floor
Patients and Their Family Members
Hollis Alford—66
Wilmer Cooley—82
Emmett Everett—61
      Carrie Everett, wife
Carrie (Ma’Dear) Hall—78
George Huard—91
Alice Hutzler—90
Elvira LeBlanc—82
      Mark and Sandra LeBlanc, son and daughter-in-law
Wilda McManus—70
      Angela McManus, daughter
Elaine Nelson—90
      Craig Nelson, son
      Kathryn Nelson, daughter
John Russell—80
Rose Savoie—90
      Doug Savoie, grandson
      Lou Anne Savoie Jacob, daughter
Ireatha Watson—89
LifeCare Nurses and Therapists
Cindy Chatelain—Registered nurse
Andre Gremillion—Registered nurse
Terence Stahelin—Respiratory therapist
Hospital Administrators, Directors, and Nonclinical Staff
Tim Burke—Administrator for LifeCare Hospitals of New Orleans; not present at hospital for the storm
Steven Harris—Pharmacist
Gina Isbell—Nursing director, LifeCare Chalmette campus, relocated to Baptist (Memorial) before the storm
Kristy Johnson—Physical medicine director
Therese Mendez—Nurse executive
Diane Robichaux—Assistant administrator, incident commander
Dr. John Wise—Medical director; absent for the storm
LifeCare Corporate Officials
Robbye Dubois—Corporate senior vice president for clinical services; in Shreveport, LA
People Involved in the Investigation
Louisiana Attorney General’s Office
Attorney General Charles Foti
Julie Cullen—Assistant attorney general, head of criminal division
Virginia Rider—Special agent, Medicaid Fraud Control Unit; lead investigator, Memorial case
Arthur “Butch” Schafer—Assistant attorney general, Medicaid Fraud Control Unit; lead prosecutor, Memorial case
Kris Wartelle—Public information director
US Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General
Artie Delaneuville—Special agent
Orleans Parish District Attorney’s Office
Eddie J. Jordan Jr.—District attorney
Michael Morales—Assistant district attorney; lead prosecutor, Memorial case
Craig Famularo—Assistant district attorney, senior to Morales
Orleans Parish Coroner’s Office
Dr. Frank Minyard—Coroner
Forensic Consultants
Dr. Michael Baden—Forensic pathologist, New York City
Dr. Frank Brescia—Oncologist, palliative care specialist, Medical University of South Carolina
Arthur Caplan—Bioethicist; chairman, Department of Medical Ethics, and director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania (until 2012; now at New York University)
Dr. Steven B. Karch—Cardiac pathologist; former assistant medical examiner, San Francisco, CA Dr. Robert Middleberg—Laboratory director, National Medical Services, Inc.
Dr. Cyril Wecht—Forensic pathologist; coroner, Allegheny County, PA (until 2006)
Dr. James Young—Special advisor to the Government of Canada on emergency management; president, American Academy of Forensic Sciences (2006–2007); former chief coroner of Ontario, Canada
Others
Government Officials
Louisiana governor Kathleen Babineaux Blanco (2004–2008)
US senator Mary Landrieu (since 1997)
Mayor Ray C. Nagin, City of New Orleans (2002–2010)
Emergency Responders and Experts
Knox Andress—Health resources services administration district regional coordinator for part of northwest Louisiana, based in Shreveport; registered nurse at CHRISTUS Schumpert Health System; communicated with LifeCare corporate officials during the disaster
LTJG Shelley Decker, US Coast Guard (now LT); at emergency command center, Alexandria, Louisiana
Cynthia Matherne—Health resources services administration district regional coordinator for part of southeast Louisiana, including New Orleans; based at the emergency operations center in New Orleans City Hall; communicated with Tenet Healthcare officials during the disaster
Michael Richard, US Coast Guard Auxiliary; at emergency command center, Alexandria, Louisiana
Dr. Robert Wise—Vice president, division of standards and survey methods, Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, JCAHO (now medical advisor, division of healthcare quality evaluation at the organization, renamed the Joint Commission)
Colleagues and Patients of Dr. Anna Pou
Dr. Daniel Nuss—Chairman, Department of Otolaryngology; head and neck surgery, Louisiana State University Health Science Center
James O’Bryant—53, patient of Dr. Anna Pou
 Brenda O’Bryant, wife
 James Lawrence O’Bryant, son
 Tabatha O’Bryant, daughter
Defense Attorneys
Eddie Castaing—Attorney for Lori Budo
Richard T. Simmons Jr.—Attorney for Dr. Anna Pou

NOTE TO THE READER

THIS BOOK RECOUNTS what happened at Memorial Medical Center during and after Hurricane Katrina in August 2005 and follows events through the aftermath of the crisis, when medical professionals were arrested and accused of having hastened the deaths of their patients. Many people held a piece of this story, and I conducted more than five hundred interviews with hundreds of them: doctors, nurses, staff members, hospital executives, patients, family members, government officials, ethicists, attorneys, researchers, and others. I was not at the hospital to witness the events. I began researching them in February 2007 and wrote an account of them in 2009, copublished on the investigative news site ProPublica and in the
New York Times Magazine
: “The Deadly Choices at Memorial.”

Because memories often fade and change, source materials dating from the time of the disaster and its immediate aftermath were particularly valuable, including photographs, videotapes, e-mails, notes, diaries, Internet postings, articles, and the transcripts of interviews by other reporters or investigators. The narrative was also informed by weather reports, architectural floor plans, electrical diagrams, and reports prepared by plaintiff and defense experts in the course of civil litigation; and I visited the hospital and other sites depicted in the book.

Dialogue rendered in quotation marks is reproduced exactly as it was recalled in interviews, or is taken directly from transcripts and other primary sources. If one person recounted an important conversation, I generally attempted to contact all participants, but some declined to speak, and at times memories were at odds. The main text and Notes highlight areas of significant dispute and indicate the sources of quotes when they do not derive from interviews with me. Typographical mistakes are preserved in quoted e-mails to give the reader a sense of the urgency involved in their production.

This book relates the thoughts, impressions, and opinions of the people in it, perhaps the most fraught aspect of narrative journalism. Attributed thoughts or feelings reflect those that a person shared in an interview, wrote down in notes, a diary, or a manuscript, or, less commonly, expressed to others whom I interviewed. As any book reflects the interwoven interpretations and insights of its author, I have tried to make these distinct. All errors are mine.

PART I
DEADLY CHOICES

Blindness was spreading, not like a sudden tide flooding everything and carrying all before it, but like an insidious infiltration of a thousand and one turbulent rivulets which, having slowly drenched the earth, suddenly submerge it completely.
—José Saramago,
Blindness

PROLOGUE

AT LAST THROUGH the broken windows, the pulse of helicopter rotors and airboat propellers set the summer morning air throbbing with the promise of rescue. Floodwaters unleashed by Hurricane Katrina had marooned hundreds of people at the hospital, where they had now spent four days. Doctors and nurses milled in the foul-smelling second-floor lobby. Since the storm, they had barely slept, surviving on catnaps, bottled water, and rumors. Before them lay a dozen or so mostly elderly patients on soiled, sweat-soaked stretchers.

In preparation for evacuation, these men and women had been lifted by their hospital sheets, carried down flights of stairs from their rooms, and placed in a corner near an ATM and a planter with wilting greenery. Now staff and volunteers—mostly children and spouses of medical workers who had sought shelter at the hospital—hunched over the infirm, dispensing sips of water and fanning the miasma with bits of cardboard.

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