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Code Blue: A Katrina Physician's Memoir

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The book that finally gives a physician's inside story of the evacuation of Memorial Medical Center following Katrina - a gripping tale of abandonment and survival. A toxic stew of floodwaters surrounded Memorial Medical Center in New Orleans after Katrina when the levees broke. Over two thousand people were trapped in the squalid conditions without security as the death toll steadily rose inside. Bodies stacked up in the chapel as the temperature soared in the overcrowded hospital and the situation became increasingly desperate. Doctors, nurses, and staff worked around the clock, caring for those inside and trying to evacuate the facility, also known as Baptist Hospital. Allegations of euthanasia would later make headlines across the country and be investigated by state and local officials. Code A Katrina Physician's Memoir finally tells the inside story of the hellish nightmare those who struggled to survive the ordeal were cast into. Dr. Richard Deichmann, the hospital's chief of medicine and one of the leaders of the evacuation, gives his compelling account of the rapidly deteriorating state of affairs at the hospital. He takes us through the daily horrors and numbing disappointments. This gripping tale of survival, despite betrayal and abandonment by the authorities, may change forever the way you view the threat of a mass disaster. What Others are Saying about Code A Katrina Physician's Memoir As a physician who has been on hurricane duty for prior storms, I thought I could imagine what it would be like if we were hit by a severe storm. I was wrong. This book should serve as a warning about what can happen when basic modern conveniences such as power, running water, communications and safety are taken away. - Karen Blessey, MD With a scalpel's precision, Dr. Deichmann takes us into the faltering heart of a huge New Orleans hospital - his hospital - as Hurricane Katrina chokes off its vit

188 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
3 reviews
January 17, 2008
This is a first person account of what happened in a New Orlean's hospital after the levees broke. I could not put this book down. It should be read by everyone who works in a hospital and in emergency management to help them anticipate problems that might arise. It should also be read by those who were in impossible situations in New Orleans at that time.
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Author 13 books83 followers
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September 28, 2020
15 years on and I still get chills reading personal accounts
Profile Image for Erin.
114 reviews
October 20, 2021
So well written. Great book to share with my nursing assistant students.
Profile Image for Delway Burton.
315 reviews4 followers
September 5, 2015
This amazing book has been recommended to me several times and I finally sat down to read it. I was not disappointed. Much of the near time sci-fi being written and filmed concerns a dystopian future. This book is about the dystopian now. Written by an MD who was head of the medicine department at Baptist Hospital in New Orleans during the catastrophe that was Hurricane Katrina. The scope of the disaster, its sudden onset, the incompetence of both the federal and local governments (in particular the police), the heroism of the medical staff and other individuals who helped sustain and then evacuate over 2000 people over 5 days reads like fiction. The individual stories stand out such as one man and his son who drove from Texas towing their flat bottomed fishing boat who showed up at the submerged ER ramp of the hospital because "they just wanted to help," form indelible images in the reader's mind. This story also reminds us that in the modern world where subsistence seems a historical anachronism, we are a very short step from chaos.
63 reviews
February 9, 2017
Interesting.....

I found this book to be raw, effective, and an up close account of what occurred during that horrific week. Thousands of lives were needlessly lost, many of them the elderly and the infirm. Such an epic failure on the part of the government. Thanks to the heroic and heroine efforts of the administrators, staff, and volunteers many lives were saved.
737 reviews
May 30, 2010
It was really very interesting to hear the Baptist Hospital horror story told from a doctor's perspective. I also appreciated that Deichmann wrote it himself, however better editing would have been useful. There were quite a few grammar errors.
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24 reviews1 follower
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April 6, 2014
They say "healthcare is a higher calling". This book proves the sense of responsibility healthcare workers feel for those in need. As an institution Baptist Hospital extended its responsibility to the neighborhood. Amazing.
Profile Image for Mary Beaudry.
4 reviews
March 11, 2016
This is a horrifying account of what transpired at Baptist during Katrina. I am reading this for a Community Health class that I am teaching, but quickly got drawn in to the real-life accounts of the horror patients and staff encountered.
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680 reviews12 followers
May 9, 2009
A must-read for everyone - a sad moment in our country's history. Great writing on a hospital during Hurricane Katrina.
Profile Image for Bruce Smith.
Author 4 books7 followers
June 14, 2012
This is a gripping tale and a must read for healthcare professionals, emergency response, and anyone who lives in areas vulnerable to hurricanes.
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