US
hospitals are not prepared to deal with a big event, such as a disaster or a
terrorist attack, according to findings released Monday from a House oversight
committee. The survey included seven major cities and the hospitals were
inspected on Tuesday, March 25 at 4:30 p.m., local time.
The 34 hospitals surveyed in New York City, Washington, Los
Angeles, Chicago, Denver, Houston and Minneapolis had no available space in the
emergency rooms, one emergency room was operating at over 200 percent of
capacity, hospitals had few available beds in the intensive care units; in Los
Angeles, three Level I trauma centers were so overcrowded that they closed
their door to the patients, Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who chairs the House
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, said.
“If a terrorist attack had occurred in Washington,
D.C. or Los
Angeles on March 25 when we did our survey, the
consequences could have been catastrophic. The emergency care systems were
stretched to the breaking point and had no capacity to respond to a surge of
victims,” Waxman said.
The report was also used to illustrate why Waxman opposes
President George W. Bush’s proposed cuts to the federal Medicaid program. US
President has proposed $18.2 billion in cuts to Medicaid over five years.
The report compared the situation with what happened after
the Madrid
attack, when 966 victims were transported to 15 hospitals and a single hospital
had to handle over 250 victims. To conclude, Waxman said hospitals are not
prepared for the most probable form of attack, a suicide bomber, as Bruce
Hoffman of Georgetown
University said. Waxman
called the results of the report “truly alarming.”