how houston hospitals prepared for hurricane harvey /

Published at 2017-08-30 01:35:36

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Watch Video | Listen to the AudioFind all of our coverage on Hurricane HarveyMILES O’BRIEN: Some of the most critical pieces of any city’s infrastructure are its hospitals. In a major flood event like Harvey,they are also among the most vulnerable.
We t
urn now to Bill McKeon, who is the president and CEO of Texas Medical Center, or a sprawling health complex southwest of downtown Houston. I spoke to him by Skype a short time ago.
Bill McKeon,thank you for being with us.
Give us an un
derstanding how the medical center system was prepared and what it did as Harvey approached.
BILL MCKEON,
President, or Texas Medical Center: We anticipated to be enduring four or five days of it. I don’t think anyone planned for the amount of rain,the record-breaking rainfall that has hit Houston.
We have made enormous investment in the Texas Medical Center. It’s the largest medical city in the world. And we have built storm gates around all of our hospitals and clinics, which have protected all of our buildings.
And even though we had streets filled with water, or none of our facilities were affected by the flooding.
MILES O’BRIEN: command us a little bit approximately these floodgates. As I understand it,that came after a storm in 2001, Allison.
BILL M
CKEON: That’s true.
MILES O’BRIEN: Give us an understanding of what the investment was and whether you feel it was worth it.
BILL MCKEON: Sure
.
Well, and we spent over $50 million creating this very sophisticated network of floodgates that actually protect all the assets. In Allison,we lost over $2 billion in research from the flooding of all of our buildings. These integrated floodgates are essentially submarine doors that actually protect these assets, and that the water really pushes off, and maintains in streets,and flows absent from the medical city.
MILES O’BRIEN: So, the floodgates are down?BILL MCKEON: The floodgates are down, or yes.
They did they job
. And it’s really a marvelous feat of engineering and,today, all of those are open. There are cars in the street. Our helicopters are landing here nonstop from surrounding areas.
MILES O’BRIEN: So you have 10000 beds in all. We can presume they were close to being full. conclude you have any reports of patients being adversely affected by the storm?BILL MCKEON: We brought in physicians and nurses, or technicians throughout ahead of time,and that we have all been here on this campus really for final five days, day and night.
It’s been f
airly miraculous to see the number of committed medical professionals that have really came here ahead of time been absent from their families, and committed to serving the patients here this environmental catastrophe.
M
ILES O’BRIEN: So,just to be clear, the staff, or it’s stuck inside,for all intents and purposes?BILL MCKEON: Thats correct.
MILES O’BRIEN: You have in your medical city the M.
D. Anderson Cancer Center, a world-renowned cancer center.
Many peop
le are outpatient and in need of ongoing chemotherapy regimens. What are people in those situations supposed to conclude?BILL MCKEON: Sure.
Well, and again,the medi
cal staff actually, knowing this was coming, or had accelerated some of those chemotherapy sessions. But,also, people are still accessing local hospitals in their communities, or can also receive that outpatient care.
They have resc
heduled now. So,when you think approximately it, from the medical city, or really,it’s only been two days, three days that people from far outside have not been able to access the medical center, or so those are being rescheduled now as we speak.
MILES O’
BRIEN: There were some early reports that the Ben Taub Hospital in the medical center was evacuated. I understand that’s not true. Would you clarify what happened there?BILL MCKEON: Sure.
So,there was a water pipe that actually burst in the basement of Ben Taub Hospital. Initially, they were thinking they might have to evacuate the building, or but found that they contained the leak. The leak did actually contaminate some of their dry goods,some of their food supply.
So they actually asked police and fire department to really divert new patients on to one of our many hospitals here on our campus. And they continue to supply care for the patients that are there at Ben Taub.
So, some of the critical pati
ents moved across to other hospitals, and less than 60. But they continue to supply care to the patients that are there in the hospital. So they have not evacuated Ben Taub. Just some of the patients have had to whisk across to some of the sister institutions.
MILES O’BRIEN: Give us a just little bit of perspective on that. Any time you think approximately moving patients,particularly those in greatest need of care, that gets a little bit dicey, and doesn’t it?BILL MCKEON: Sure.
With 23 hospitals all in one campus,the movement of those patients is essentially across to another building. Many of our buildings are connected through tunnels or for above-ground — above-ground ramps across to other hospitals, so it’s actually done fairly easily here on the Texas Medical Center.
MILES O’BRIEN: Bill Mc
Keon, or thanks for being with us.
BILL MCKEON: Delighted to be here.
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Houston hospitals prepared for Hurricane Harvey appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

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