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Study: Hospitals would be 'overloaded' by nuclear attack on U.S. (SHOCKER!)
USA Today
| 4/15/07
Posted on 04/15/2007 6:36:23 PM PDT by Mr. Brightside
Link Only. Read only if you have to.
TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: captainobvious; hospital; hospitals; nuclear; nuke
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To: Mr. Brightside
They don’t want to run the risk that people who know how full of it they are might accidently read their bird-cage liner, which is written for people who read on the third-grade level.
41
posted on
04/15/2007 8:12:31 PM PDT
by
3AngelaD
To: JZoback
The article is pretty good, lots of good statsI agree.
42
posted on
04/15/2007 8:13:34 PM PDT
by
processing please hold
(Duncan Hunter '08) (ROP and Open Borders-a terrorist marriage and hell's coming with them)
To: lightman
43
posted on
04/15/2007 8:18:33 PM PDT
by
GOPJ
(Good judgment's often the child of bad judgment.)
To: Windcatcher
Anyone know how long Potassium Iodate keeps for?
http://www.emergencyresources.com/er_potiod.html
It has a very long shelf life, nearly indefinite
To: Windcatcher
Anyone know how long Potassium Iodate keeps for?
http://www.emergencyresources.com/er_potiod.html
It has a very long shelf life, nearly indefinite
To: HangnJudge
That’s the manufacturer of the ones we ordered. Many thanks.
46
posted on
04/15/2007 8:23:46 PM PDT
by
Windcatcher
(Earth to libs: MARXISM DOESN'T SELL HERE. Try somewhere else.)
To: Mr. Brightside
They are overloaded on a typical Friday night.
To: Mr. Brightside
I’ve got a surprise. Our hospital and medical care system can be overloaded by about *any* serious surge in disease or injury.
This is because our entire medical care system is based on what is called “push” supply. This means that there are only tiny reserves of just about every kind of medical equipment, supplies, and drugs available.
For example, one of the most critical pieces of equipment needed during flu season are ventilators. The US has about 102,000 of them. During a normal flu season, we need about 100,000 of those.
But if we get hit with a major flu epidemic, or even worse, a killer flu, we might need 5,000,000 ventilators overnight, or lots of people will suffocate to death, who would have lived.
Whenever there is a major disaster in the US *right now*, hospitals several States away have to send any extra supplies to the disaster area, because the local hospitals will be *out* in short order.
This means a single city can drain four or five States worth of medical supplies, that could take weeks for industry to resupply, because they regularly operate at near capacity, and have no ability to surge their production.
To: buccaneer81
49
posted on
04/15/2007 8:32:07 PM PDT
by
TASMANIANRED
(Taz Struck By Lightning Faces Battery Charge)
To: Windcatcher
Thats the manufacturer of the ones we ordered. Many thanks.
In truth, O judges, while I wish to be adorned with every virtue, yet there is nothing which I can esteem more highly than the being and appearing grateful. For this one virtue is not only the greatest, but is also the parent of all the other virtues.
Author: Cicero
Pro Plancio 80
Circa 58 BC
To: NonValueAdded
You ever see the movie. 'Testament'?
A good movie. No bombs seen going off but the bright light and everything goes dead. The aftermath is horrible. Burning bodies in parks, mass graves. People dying from radiation sickness. Food running out.
All in all, a good movie.
51
posted on
04/15/2007 8:40:38 PM PDT
by
processing please hold
(Duncan Hunter '08) (ROP and Open Borders-a terrorist marriage and hell's coming with them)
To: Mr. Brightside
What is particularly scary is that with an improvised nuclear device detonated at ground level, not only do you get the blast and immediate radiation effects from the bomb, but also you get a HUGE amount of fallout kicked up into the air from the ground level blast. That could mean anything up to 100 miles downwind from the blast could become unhabitable, and the death toll from fallout radiation poisoning could be just as bad as the death toll from the initial blast. We're talking an economic toll that could well exceed US$1 trillion if the bomb was detonated in the center of a large city.
To: Mr. Brightside
The full moon causes ER rooms to be filled too.
To: Mr. Brightside
Maybe they should consider changing the headline to:
Hospitals will be destroyed in nuclear attack.
54
posted on
04/15/2007 10:08:05 PM PDT
by
DemEater
To: Mr. Brightside
file this next to “the pope is catholic”
To: dfwgator
Knowledge Is Good. - Emil Faber "K o l e g s G o ." - Eberhard Faber
56
posted on
04/15/2007 11:03:29 PM PDT
by
Egon
("If all your friends were named Cliff, would you jump off them??" - Hugh Neutron)
To: HangnJudge
It has a very long shelf life, nearly indefinite Not unlike a Twinkie.
57
posted on
04/15/2007 11:05:14 PM PDT
by
Egon
("If all your friends were named Cliff, would you jump off them??" - Hugh Neutron)
To: Pontiac
Maybe we should spend a Trillion Dollars of public funds so build enough hospitals so that we could handle the millions of injured people that might need medical care should some very unlikely disaster occur. Sarcasm is as sarcasm does. :)
Be cheaper to issue everybody a "graphic novel" style DIY first aid manual; a PDR; a Merk Manual of Nursing; a Boy Scout Field Manual; and a couple of amps of morphine & atropine.
Just as useful, too.
P.S. I went through grammar school in the early 1950's; I still remember how to 'duck & cover'. That's also just as useful.
58
posted on
04/15/2007 11:25:13 PM PDT
by
ApplegateRanch
(Islam: a Satanically Transmitted Disease, spread by unprotected intimate contact with the Koranus.)
To: dfwgator
Did you know that one nuclear bomb could ruin your whole day?Several years ago I actually heard Cindi Lauper on some tv show say "I mean,a nuclear bomb landing in your back yard could ruin your whole day." Well, no sh!t Sherlock.
59
posted on
04/15/2007 11:34:32 PM PDT
by
barker
( A smile is a curved line that sets things straight.)
To: ApplegateRanch
Just as useful, too. Actually I think every family having all of those the things you list would be much more useful than a bunch of huge empty hospitals.
Every family would be well advised to have a disaster kit in the home.
But being the Conservative that I am I dont believe that the Government should supply those items or mandate their purchase or ownership by individuals.
60
posted on
04/15/2007 11:42:58 PM PDT
by
Pontiac
(Patriotism is the natural consequence of having a free mind in a free society.)
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