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June 12, 2007 (KABC-TV) - Edith Rodriguez, a 43-year old mother of three, died last month, writhing in pain on the floor of King Harbor Hospital's emergency room lobby, as the staff at the hospital allegedly ignored her.
On Tuesday, recordings of 911 calls were released. On the calls, other people in the emergency room tried in vain to get help.
It is a case sending shockwaves throughout county government and the community that the hospital serves.
The hospital, King/Harbor (formerly King-Drew) Medical Center, has been through numerous overhauls, failing time and again to make necessary improvements.
The death of 43-year-old Edith Rodriguez displays a serious lapse, according to the supervisors.
She was discharged from the hospital, yet she remained in serious pain. She never left the hospital grounds; she got to the emergency room and collapsed.
Recordings of two 911 calls were released on Tuesday. One is from a bystander, the other is from Rodriguez's boyfriend, Jose Prado, who spoke through a interpretor and tried in vain to get help.
Operator: I'm trying to get an interpreter for you, sir ... can you find out what his emergency is, please?
Caller (Prado through an interpretor): I'm in the emergency room, my wife is dying. The nurses don't want to help her out.
Operator: OK, what do you mean she's dying? What's wrong with her?
Caller (Prado through an interpretor): She's vomiting blood.
Operator: OK, and why aren't they helping her?
Caller (Prado through an interpretor): They're watching her. They're watching her there and they're not doing anything. They're just watching her.
A bystander also tried to get help for Rodriguez.
Operator: What's your emergency?
Caller: There's a lady on the ground in here, in the emergency room at Martin Luther King and they are overlooking her, claiming that she's been discharged and she's definitely sick, and ... they're just ignoring her.
Operator: What do you want me to do for you, ma'am?
Caller: Send an ambulance out here to take her somewhere where she can get medical help.
Operator: OK, you're at the hospital ma'am. You have to contact them.
Caller: They have a problem, they won't help her.
Operator: Well, you know if you're not pleased with the result you're getting from them, you know we can't ...
Caller: Well it's another patient. I'm not pleased with the results.
Operator: 911 is used for emergency purposes only, life-threatening emergencies.
Caller: This is an emergency.
Operator: It is not.
In addition to the 911 tape, the supervisors have viewed surveillance video of the emergency room. They are appalled at how many people ignored Rodriguez.
Much of the blame was placed on the head nurse who failed to assess the gravity of the situation.
"Here you had a situation where you had a dozen people in a emergency room, nobody got up to help. The janitors came over to clean the vomit around the victim. They did a diligent job cleaning the vomit but they didn't take one look at her," Zev Yaroslavsky, L.A. County Supervisor, said.
"If you have the wrong people who are in charge, you cannot turn around something that starts going in a very negative way. This nurse who made the decision that this woman was not really hurt that badly or that she was, I don't know what her decision was, but she obviously decided the woman was not in the need of immediate care. That should have been turned around," Yvonne Brathwaite-Burke, L.A. County Supervisor, said.
King/Harbor Medical Center has been under fire since 2003 because of numerous deaths under questionable circumstances.
Scores of people have been fired, including the head nurse who was involved in that latest incident. The hospital remains under federal investigation.
The board of supervisors is calling for more training, but it has been a challenge. Supervisor Yaroslavsky: "How do you train a person to care?"
http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?section=local&id=5391370