Reflection On 9/11 2001 The Medical Response And Lessons Learned

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September 11, 2001: The medical response and lessons learned
September 28, 2014
Rollin Rogers

The day was bright, beautiful and in the upper 60’s, not a typical September day in New York City. Weathermen were talking about how days like this could last forever. There was a high pressure system following an unseasonable cold week and a hurricane just off the shore. The day was beautiful, not a cloud in the sky nothing to worry about. That was until 0846 that morning when Flight 11 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center at nearly 466 MPH (Results). The world is not sure what happened, was it a mistake? Was the plane in trouble? At 0903 Flight 175 crashes into the second tower of the World Trade Center at …show more content…

There were in fact more than 40 patients on the lawn. The Chief of Emergency Medicine at WRAMC Lieutenant Colonel (LTC) Edward Lucci said "The physicians on scene did a heroic job of getting to the people who ultimately survived (Shute, 2001).” The bystanders helped LTC Lucci transport the most critical patients to nearby hospitals, once the most critical were taken care of the triage center was set up in the courtyard of the Pentagon. The triage center only sent 80 wounded personnel to area …show more content…

medical students do not feel they receive adequate disaster training (Raymond). In 2011 the AOA House of Delegates approved a resolution that called for Osteopathic Medical Schools to offer disaster response training and courses. The team cited that the increase incidence of man-made and natural disaster worldwide has caused for a change. One of the team members said “Most of the time, people think disaster medicine, they think lights and sirens, emergency medicine but public health plays a very important role because of water, immunization, food, shelter, and basic needs

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