Presbyterian Hospital Of Dallas - Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital
Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas is a tertiary care facility in the United States, located in the Vickery Meadow area of Dallas, Texas. The hospital, which opened in 1966, has 898 beds and around 1,200 physicians. The hospital is the largest business within Vickery Meadow. In 2008, the hospital implemented a program in which critical care physician specialists are available to patients in the medical and surgical intensive care units 24 hours a day, eliminating ventilator-associated pneumonia, central line infections and pressure ulcers.
The hospital received much criticism in 2014, after the Ebola incident. One patient, Thomas Eric Duncan, who allegedly told healthcare workers there that he had recently traveled from Liberia, was not initially diagnosed with Ebola, but sent home. When he continued to become sicker he returned to the hospital, where his Ebola was correctly diagnosed, but he died of the disease. Two nurses who had treated this patient, Nina Pham and Amber Joy Vinson, subsequently contracted Ebola. Ms. Vinson had flown from Dallas to Ohio and back before she was diagnosed with Ebola, potentially exposing a number of other people to the disease in the meantime.
Notable patients
- John McClamrock - American high school football player injured during a game and paralyzed for the remainder of his life.
- Former President George W. Bush successfully received a stent here in a surgical procedure after a blockage was found in an artery during a physical examination at Dallas's Cooper Clinic.
- Thomas Eric Duncan - First patient diagnosed with Ebola virus disease, and first person to develop Ebola in the United States, in late September 2014. The hospital sent him home after he allegedly told them he had just been to an Ebola infected area. After he returned to the hospital and was admitted, two nurses caught Ebola from Mr. Duncan, and were treated at the hospital as well. Nurse Nina Pham, the first person to contract Ebola in the United States, was transferred to the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD. Nurse Amber Joy Vinson was transferred to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, GA. Anonymous nurses later allege that during Duncan's time of eventual treatment there had been neither established protocol to follow nor sufficient protective gear, although they all received proper training for such competencies during nursing school, which requires all students to show evidence of competency for personal protective equipment requirements based on disease and m ode of transmission.
References
External links
- Official website
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