Anesthesiologist Brian Brown, MD, of Lafayette, Ind., attended the Boston Marathon Monday to cheer on his running wife, but the bomb explosions sent him immediately into action caring for the wounded, according to a Journal and Courier report.
Dr. Brown said the injuries he immediately saw were gruesome, and people needed to get to hospitals quickly before losing too much blood. He and other medical staff members put tourniquets on and applied pressure to wounds — anything to increase survival rates, according to the report.
Dr. Brown's wife, Libby Riggs, an emergency room physician, got a text from a friend two miles before she reached the finish line, saying her husband had been spotted on TV pushing a gurney. He also worked to start IVs and carry the injured to nearby ambulances.
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Dr. Brown said the injuries he immediately saw were gruesome, and people needed to get to hospitals quickly before losing too much blood. He and other medical staff members put tourniquets on and applied pressure to wounds — anything to increase survival rates, according to the report.
Dr. Brown's wife, Libby Riggs, an emergency room physician, got a text from a friend two miles before she reached the finish line, saying her husband had been spotted on TV pushing a gurney. He also worked to start IVs and carry the injured to nearby ambulances.
More Articles on Anesthesiologists:
4 Skills to Look for When Including Anesthesia Groups in an ACO
ASA Applauds Proposed Rule to Mandate Nurse Anesthetist Physician Supervision
17 Statistics on Anesthesiologist Burn Out