strongly object to weapons

2016-02-23 16:51
Many mental health professionals strongly object to weapons in hospitals, saying they have numerous other means — from talk therapy to cloth restraints and seclusion rooms to quick-acting shots of sedatives — to subdue patients if they pose a danger. State mental health facilities typically do not allow guns or Tasers on their premises; even police officers are asked to check weapons at the door. (Twenty-three percent of shootings in emergency rooms involved someone grabbing a gun from a security officer, according to a study by Dr. Gabor Kelen, director of emergency medicine at Johns Hopkins Medical School.) Uniforms and weapons may, in fact, tam trang an toan o tp hcm exacerbate delusions, since dia chi nang nguc tin cay dia chi nang nguc tin cay many psychotic patients are paranoid and, like Alan Pean, Anxious Patient to Felony Suspect Racing upstairs to a Code Blue in Room 834, Dr. Arango found a cluster of about 20 Houston police officers in the hall, according to his interview with investigators. When he pulled back dia chi nang nguc o tphcm the sheet covering Mr. Pean, he tam trang an toan o sai gon saw that the patient was in handcuffs, his torso dotted with Taser probes and a bloody wound on his upper chest. It was only after the doctor noted the blood pooling around the young man, who began shouting that he was Superman as the physician tried to examine the wound, that someone mentioned he had not only been hit with the Taser, but also shot. Advertisement Continue reading the main story “Take the damn handcuffs off!” Dr. Arango yelled, according tam trang an toan spa to an employee believe they are being pursued. Anthony O’Brien, a researcher at the University of Auckland, in New Zealand, said, “That’s not a good thing, pointing something that looks like a gun at a patient with mental health issues.” When the two Houston officers arrived on St. Joseph’s eighth floor, they phau thuat nang nguc o dau dep headed for Room 834. Unannounced, and unaccompanied by doctors, nurses or social workers, they went in, the door closing behind them.