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Criminal medical behaviour: King Edward Hospital staff refuse two traffic-victims medical treatment at emergency ward: hold 2 paramedics hostage

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Paramedics held against their will at King Edward Hospital Durban: nurses refused to treat their patients: Sowetan journalist Nivashni Nair reports from Durban in South Africa on 1 April 2015 that white Rescue Care operations director Garrith Jamieson claimed that the hospital’s security guards locked the gates and refused to let the paramedics leave after the two paramedics took pictures of the empty trauma unit and nurses standing together showing no interest in the two patients that were brought in. He said the two injured patients were brought in from a collision on the M7. “On arrival paramedics found the trauma unit totally empty with no patients inside. The nurses were having a meeting and ignored the paramedics and the patients for approximately 10 minutes‚” he said. “The paramedic then took a picture of the empty trauma unit and the black staff standing together showing no interest in the two (white) patients that were brought in for help. This was going to be used to lay a formal complaint against the staff‚” he alleged. Jamieson claimed that the nurses started shouting at the paramedics and called security when they realised that photographs had been taken. “The nurses complained that they did not want to help as the paramedics had not called the hospital before they came through. The paramedics tried explaining that this is a hospital and should be ready for any emergency at any time as advertised by their board outside saying 24 Hour Emergency.” He alleged that the security guards threatened the paramedics and tried to force them into the security office. “The security gates were closed and locked and the ambulance and staff were not allowed to leave and were held against their will‚” he said. Police were called in when Rescue Care management were also allegedly threatened when they arrived at the hospital. “Once SAPS had arrived the security guards opened the gate and allowed the ambulance to leave. This entire episode took just under two hours and whilst these security guards were arguing and holding paramedics against their will emergency calls were not able to be serviced‚” Jamieson said. Rescue Care will be seeking advice to take the matter further. “This is a common problem at King Edward Hospital. The hospital is only informed if the patient is critically injured or there is multiple people injured otherwise stable patients are transported to the area facility closest to the scene as per the drainage area issued by the Department of Health‚” he said. http://newsletters.sowetanlive.co.za/servlet/link/64/11230/54659/430040 https://www.facebook.com/rescuecareza

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