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A letter from Joplin


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#1 HighPlainsMedic

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Posted 26 May 2011 - 04:27 PM

I was forwarded this from the Colo. Hospital Preparedness Program.... it''s up to date as of Tuesday and the only think i want to add, is I did some paragraph "enter" and punctuation so otthers would not be distracted by a no paragraph document.. I hope this works..

Man it was and still is Awful

Date: Tuesday, May 24, 2011, 3:21 PM

Ok everybody. Here we go... what a ride it has been. I just woke up from crashing finally... I was at work at Freeman hospital when the tornado hit. I was the ONLY maintenance man on the evening shift. The alert sounded. Said it was a warning for Carl junction which is 10 miles north of where we were. I started all the generators. 10 of them. Just in case... when the storm hit we did not realize what had happened only 1/4 north of us at St Johns. Not until the caravans of people started coming in.
St Johns took a direct hit. Blew out all the windows, then had a gas leak and an explosion. The tornado was about 8 blocks wide and went through Joplin. West to east... never left the ground. Residential... business... residential... main business... residential. We had people coming in pickups with wounded... cars with all the windows blown out. People on boards, doors, tables.
We emptied 4 conference rooms of the rolling chairs.. About 100... to use as wheel chairs. We had 4 triage areas going full blast. One at each entrance. People were lined up for 10 blocks or more just to get to our driveways. We had just gone through an earthquake drill last week, so everyone knew their supplies were. It was calm chaos. Hundreds of wounded, covered in blankets, sitting in chairs, lying on the floor in rows. Blood everywhere.. New chairs coming now for sure.... the nurses and doctors were great.
Our phones were out instantly... the cell towers were inundated couldn't get out. We couldn't call for reinforcements.. they just started showing up. From everywhere.. EMT's, nurses, doctors, local and even from out of town. The few in the kitchen started making sandwiches; we brought out all the blankets we had, brought up rolling supply carts of bandages, cases of bottled water. Formed small groups of volunteers to manage traffic so the ambulances could get in and out. school buses of injured started coming it. Truckers were bringing in semi loads of injured.
No lights in Joplin, we have a six story tower and all you could see were blue and red lights everywhere. I personally took the 1st six bodies and started a temporary morgue. The stories people were telling were beyond belief... we had probably 10 or 12 dogs running somewhat loose in the hospital that people had brought in with them. Smoking in the hospital on a no smoking campus. Cries of pain, sorrow and yes even joy when people would find loved ones.
The situation in town is way WORSE than you see on TV. I came home in the dark and did not know where I was because of the destruction, until I came to a roundabout in the road and realized I had gone a mile too far. I couldn't get through to Sandy on the phones and people started coming in from the area I lived in with horror stories of total destruction. The home depot you see on TV is just blocks from us... finally another employee came in and said his mom was ok. and she just lives two blocks from us.
the tornado just missed my son by two blocks as well. My daughter in law is a therapist and has no office building to go to anymore. her father is a dentist who has no office building to go to anymore.
Joplin will take years to rebuild. kinda like the twin towers. you can actually see all the way through town, end to end. the high school is gone. a major business street, going east and west on the east of town is flat on both sides of the street for two miles. nothing left standing. thousands of people have lost their homes, and their possessions, AND their income because their places of employment have vanished off the map.
on the other hand, THANK THE LORD, I have my home, my possesions and my job. I never had to serve in combat, but surely this has to be somewhat similar in relation of chaos. I kinda know what the Japanese must feel like after the sunami now. yes I know some of the dead in joplin personally.
Freeman hospital still looks kinda like it did that night.
We still have STUFF everywhere. The floor is still dirty because Joplin has virtually no water pressure. We barely have enough water to run our sterilizers for instruments. Only two bathrooms work in the hospital... don't know whey they do... the water company has SO MANY broken pipes in houses that are gone, that they can't get the pressure to come up. A large area of the roof blew off and the rain collected and ran down in between the layers of roofing and into the areas full of pipes and wires and is still dripping and of course the rain won't stop so we can fix the roof. We have buckets all over the halls and even have a couple of areas of rooms we can't even use because the water keeps coming out of the ceiling area. We have removed hundreds of ceiling tiles that have gotten wet and were coming down anyway. The fire alarms keep going off all the time because the wiring system is getting wetter and wetter with all the leaks. We have to check each alarm to make sure there is no fire and then silence it.

PLEASE PRAY FOR US. A LOT OF PEOPLE'S LIVES ARE CHANGED FOREVER. MINE IS. AND I AM ALRIGHT. THANKS FOR ALL THE CALLS; SORRY THE PHONES STILL DON'T WORK VERY WELL. WE ARE ON CURFEW DUSK TO DAWN WITH NATIONAL GUARD AT HUNDREDS OF INTERSECTIONS. A 15 MINUTE DRIVE TO HOME TOOK ME AN HOUR. ONLY MY FREEMAN BADGE LET ME THROUGH. MAYBE I WILL WRITE MORE LATELY. NOW I'M GOING BACK TO SLEEP. JOHN




again, this is not my story, it is a copy and paste from another

Edited by HighPlainsMedic, 26 May 2011 - 04:29 PM.


#2 Joyce

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Posted 26 May 2011 - 06:10 PM

If these stories don't break your heart I think there is something wrong with a person. Thoughts and prayers to all.

#3 Allie

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Posted 26 May 2011 - 07:06 PM

View PostJoyce, on 26 May 2011 - 06:10 PM, said:

If these stories don't break your heart I think there is something wrong with a person. Thoughts and prayers to all.


So true, Joyce. Prayers continuing for everyone.

#4 podunkboy

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Posted 01 June 2011 - 06:46 PM

Great story, and that's why hospitals hold periodic safety drills, so when something really bad happens, they hit the ground running and provide a level of care that's amazing.

I was working at Wichita's Wesley Hospital the night of the Andover, Kansas tornado, and was mobilized to come down to the command center in the hospital auditorium to assist. Fortunately, the ER was able to handle the patients as they trickled in from outside of town, so I just had to run some records back and forth and direct some patients and guests to where they needed to go. Every time we get bad weather while I'm at work I start thinking about our safety plans.
Andover was only about 4,000 people when the tornado hit in 1991, but 20 years later they have tripled in size. Hopefully Joplin can rebuild and grow quickly.

#5 Scrapinator

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Posted 02 June 2011 - 10:15 AM

He is correct, the pictures you see on TV really don't show the devastation. I've lived in "tornado alley" my entire life and I've never seen anything like what I've seen in Joplin.

Edited by Scrapinator, 02 June 2011 - 10:16 AM.


#6 waterrat

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Posted 02 June 2011 - 11:14 AM

Same as with Scrapinator. I've had the danger of tornadoes most of my life, and then Jarrell (small town north of Austin) was hit by an F5 for the second time and nearly destroyed since I have been living in Austin. It's smaller than Joplin so it's nothing like the same scope, but goodness, it's hard to fathom or grasp what happened. The little F1 that hit Cedar Park around the same time and ripped off an Albertson's roof was bad enough.

#7 dianeh85

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Posted 03 June 2011 - 08:34 PM


This was posted on our hospital's web site tonight. Powerful recount by an ER doctor.



June 1st, 2011
Dr. Kevin Kikta Recalls the Longest 45 Seconds of Joplin Tornado
Margarita 3tweetsretweetAs posted by The City Wire directly from Dr. Kevin Kikta:

45 Seconds: Memoirs of an ER Doctor from May 22, 2011.

Posted Image Joplin EF-5 Tornado (onlinehaber24.com)

My name is Dr. Kevin Kikta, and I was one of two emergency room doctors who were on duty at St. John’s Regional Medical Center in Joplin, MO on Sunday May 22,2011.

You never know that it will be the most important day of your life until the day is over. The day started like any other day for me: waking up, eating, going to the gym, showering, and going to my 400pm ER shift. As I drove to the hospital I mentally prepared for my shift as I always do, but nothing could everhave prepared me for what was going to happen on this shift.Things were normal for the first hour and half.

At approximately 5:30 pm we received a warning that a tornado had been spotted. . Although I work in Joplin and went to medical school in Oklahoma, I live in New Jersey, and I have never seen or been in a tornado. I learned that a “code gray” was being called. We were to start bringing patients to safer spots within the ED and hospital.

At 5: 42pm a security guard yelled to everyone, “Take cover! We are about to get hit by a tornado!” I ran with a pregnant RN, Shilo Cook, while others scattered to various places, to the only place that I was familiar with in the hospital without windows, a small doctor’s office in the ED. Together, Shilo and I tremored and huddled under a desk. We heard a loud horrifying sound like a large locomotive ripping through the hospital. The whole hospital shook and vibrated as we heard glass shattering, light bulbs popping, walls collapsing, people screaming, the ceiling caving in above us, and water pipesbreaking, showering water down on everything.

We suffered this in complete darkness, unaware of anyone else’s status, worried, scared. We could feel a tight pressure in our heads as the tornado annihilated the hospital and the surrounding area. The whole process took about 45 seconds, but seemed like eternity. The hospital had just taken a direct hit from a category EF-4 tornado.

(About Dr. Kevin Kikta)



Then it was over. Just 45 seconds. 45 long seconds. We looked at each other, terrified, and thanked God that we were alive. We didn’t know, but hoped that it was safe enough to go back out to the ED, find the rest of the staff and patients, and assess our loses.

“Like a bomb went off. ” That’s the only way that I can describe what we saw next. Patients were coming into the ED in droves. It was absolute, utter chaos. They were limping, bleeding, crying, terrified, with debris and glass sticking out of them, just thankful to be alive. The floor was covered with about 3 inches of water, there was no power, not even backup generators, rendering it completely dark and eerie in the ED. The frightening aroma of methane gas leaking from the broken gas lines permeated the air; we knew, but did not dare mention aloud, what that meant. I redoubled my pace.

We had to use flashlights to direct ourselves to the crying and wounded. Where did all the flashlights come from ? I’ll never know, but immediately, and thankfully, my years of training in emergency procedures kicked in. There was no power, but our mental generators, were up and running, and on high test adrenaline. We had no cell phone service in the first hour, so we were not even able to call for help and backup in the ED.

I remember a patient in his early 20’s gasping for breath, telling me that he was going to die. After a quick exam, I removed the large shard of glass from his back, made the clinical diagnosis of a pneumothorax (collapsed lung) and gathered supplies from wherever I could locate them to insert a thoracostomy tube in him. He was a trooper; I’ll never forget his courage. He allowed me to do this without any local anesthetic since none could be found. With his life threatening injuries I knew he was running out of time, and it had to be done. Quickly. Imagine my relief when I heard a big rush of air, and breath sounds again; fortunately, I was able to get him transported out.

I immediately moved on to the next patient, an asthmatic in status asthmaticus. We didn’t even have the option of trying a nebulizer treatment or steroids, but I was able to get him intubated using a flashlight that I held in my mouth.

A small child of approximately 3-4 years of age was crying; he had a large avulsion of skin to his neck and spine. The gaping wound revealed his cervical spine and upper thoracic spine bones. I could actually count his vertebrae with my fingers. This was a child, his whole life ahead of him, suffering life threatening wounds in front of me, his eyes pleading me to help him.. We could not find any pediatric C collars in the darkness, and water from the shattered main pipes was once again showering down upon all of us. Fortunately, we were able to get him immobilized with towels, and start an IV with fluids and pain meds before shipping him out.

We felt paralyzed and helpless ourselves. I didn’t even know a lot of the RN’s I was working with. They were from departments scattered all over the hospital. It didn’t matter. We worked as a team, determined to save lives. There were no specialists available — my orthopedist was trapped in the OR. We were it, and we knew we had to get patients out of the hospital as quickly as possible.

As we were shuffling them out, the fire department showed up and helped us to evacuate. Together we worked furiously, motivated by the knowledge and fear that the methane leaks could cause the hospital could blow up at any minute.

Things were no better outside of the ED. I saw a man man crushed under a large SUV, still alive, begging for help; another one was dead, impaled by a street sign through his chest. Wounded people were walking, staggering, all over, dazed and shocked.

All around us was chaos, reminding me of scenes in a war movie, or newsreels from bombings in Bagdad.Except this was right in front of me and it had happened in just 45 seconds . My own car was blown away. Gone. Seemingly evaporated. We searched within a half mile radius later that night, but never found the car, only the littered, crumpled remains of former cars. And a John Deere tractor that had blown in from miles away.

Tragedy has a way of revealing human goodness. As I worked , surrounded by devastation and suffering, I realized I was not alone. The people of the community of Joplin were absolutely incredible. Within minutes of the horrific event, local residents showed up in pickups and sport utility vehicles, all offering to help transport the wounded to other facilities, including Freeman, the trauma center literally across the street. Ironically, it had sustained only minimal damage and was functioning (although I’m sure overwhelmed). I carried on, grateful for the help of the community.

At one point I had placed a conscious intubated patient in the back of a pickup truck with someone, a layman, for transport. The patient was self-ventilating himself, and I gave instructions to someone with absolutely no medical knowledge on how to bag the patient until they got to Freeman.

Within hours I estimated that over 100 EMS units showed up from various towns, counties and four different states.Considering the circumstances, their response time was miraculous. Roads were blocked with downed utility lines, smashed up cars in piles, and they still made it through.

We continued to carry patients out of the hospital on anything that we could find: sheets, stretchers, broken doors, mattresses,wheelchairs — anything that could be used as a transport mechanism.

As I finished up what I could do at St John’s, I walked with two RN’s, Shilo Cook and Julie Vandorn, to a makeshift MASH center that was being set up miles away at Memorial Hall.

We walked where flourishing neighborhoods once stood,astonished to see only the disastrous remains of flattened homes, body parts, and dead people everywhere. I saw a small dog just wimpering in circles over his master who was dead, unaware that his master would not ever play with him again. At one point we tended to a young woman who just stood crying over her dead mother who was crushed by her own home. The young woman covered her mother up with a blanket and then asked all of us, “What should I do?” We had no answer for her, but silence and tears.

By this time news crews and photographers were starting to swarm around, and we were able to get a ride to Memorial Hall from another RN. The chaos was slightly more controlled at Memorial Hall. I was relieved to see many of my colleagues, doctors from every specialty, helping out. It was amazing to be able to see life again.

It was also amazing to see how fast workers mobilized to set up this MASH unit under the circumstances. Supplies, food, drink, generators, exam tables, all were there — except pharmaceutical pain meds. I sutured multiple lacerations, and splinted many fractures, including some open with bone exposed, and then intubated another patient with severe COPD, slightly better controlled conditions this time, but still less than optimal.
But we really needed pain meds. I managed to go back to St John’s with another physician, pharmacist, and a sheriff’s officer. Luckily, security let us in to a highly guarded pharmacy to bring back a garbage bucket sized supply of pain meds.

At about midnight I walked around the parking lot of St. John’s with local law enforcement officers looking for anyone whomight be alive or trapped in crushed cars. They spray painted “X”s on the fortunate vehicles that had been searched without finding anyone inside. The unfortunate vehicles wore “X’s” andsprayed-on numerals, indicating the number of dead inside, crushed in their cars, cars which now resembled flattened recycled aluminum cans the tornado had crumpled in her iron hands, an EF4 tornado, one of the worst in history, whipping through this quiet town with demonic strength.

I continued back to Memorial hall into the early morning hours until my ER colleagues told me it was time for me to go home. I was completely exhausted. I had seen enough of my first tornado.

How can one describe these indescribable scenes of destruction? The next day I saw news coverage of this horrible, deadly tornado. It was excellent coverage, and Mike Bettes from the Weather Channel did a great job, but there is nothing that pictures and video can depict compared to seeing it in person. That video will play forever in my mind.

I would like to express my sincerest gratitude to everyone involved in helping during this nightmarish disaster. My fellow doctors, RN’s, techs, and all of the staff from St. John’s. I have worked at St John’s for approximately 2 years, and I have always been proud to say that I was a physician at St John’s in Joplin, MO. The smart, selfless and immediate response of the professionals and the community during this catastrophe proves to me that St John’s and the surrounding community are special. I am beyond proud.

To the members of this community, the health care workers from states away, and especially Freeman Medical Center, I commend everyone on unselfishly coming together and giving 110% the way that you all did, even in your own time of need.St John ‘s Medical Center is gone, but her spirit and goodness lives on in each of you.
EMS, you should be proud of yourselves. You were all excellent, and did a great job despite incredible difficulties and against all odds.

For all of the injured who I treated, although I do not remember your names (nor would I expect you to remember mine) I will never forget your faces. I’m glad that I was able to make a difference and help in the best way that I knew how, and hopefully give some of you a chance at rebuilding your livesagain. For those whom I was not able to get to or treat, I apologize whole heartedly.

Last, but not least, thank you, and God Bless you, Mercy/St John for providing incredible care in good times and even more so, in times of the unthinkable, and for all the training that enabled us to be a team and treat the people and save lives.





Read more: http://spotlight.vit.../#ixzz1OGpE0JaL

#8 Joyce

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Posted 10 June 2011 - 02:56 PM

I just returned yesterday from 11 days in Joplin working for the insurance company I retired from helping with getting insured's their insurance money so they can start the process of rebuilding and getting grips on their lives. Happy to say that 95% of those insureds had been paid for their homes and people are working on their contents and put into a rental place to lay their heads. I have seen many tornado damaged towns but I have never seen anything like Joplin. It still just thinking about it brings tears to my eyes knowing what they are going thru. I did see to where they are really showing progress on clean up and building things again when I left. To John and all the people in Joplin God Bless them and look over them because they need it. That town has seen what the USA can do in time of diaster. Thoughts and prayers to all.




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