Inside the Maine hospital that treated shooting victims
		
		 
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		 [October 27, 2023]  
		By Gabriella Borter and Brad Brooks 
		 
		LEWISTON, Maine (Reuters) - Dr. Richard King was driving home from the 
		Central Maine Medical Center on Wednesday night when he received an 
		urgent call from a fellow trauma surgeon alerting him that victims of a 
		mass casualty event were flooding the hospital. 
		 
		King, the trauma medical director, immediately turned around and sped 
		through Lewiston's streets with his hazard lights flashing, arriving to 
		discover what he later described in an interview as a nightmarish scene. 
		The emergency room was overflowing with wounded and bleeding patients, 
		casualties of the latest mass shooting to hit an American city. 
		 
		Within minutes, King went to work performing a "damage control" surgery 
		on one gunshot victim to stop their bleeding and save their life before 
		hustling into a different operating room to begin work on another.  
		 
		"It was a situation of organized chaos," King said. "It was really quite 
		surreal. We read about these events all too frequently, and then to be a 
		part of one ..." 
		 
		The staff of Central Maine Medical Center on Wednesday joined a growing 
		list of fellow doctors, nurses, orderlies and technicians working in 
		cities from Colorado Springs, Colorado to Highland Park, Illinois and El 
		Paso, Texas, who have seen their hospitals upended by incessant mass 
		shootings in recent years. 
		
		
		  
		
		 King told Reuters by phone from inside the heavily guarded hospital that 
		the 250-bed medical center had never seen anything resembling the 
		fallout from the Lewiston shooting, which left 18 people dead and more 
		than a dozen wounded. 
		 
		Lewiston, a former textile hub, is home to only about 38,000 people, but 
		still stands as the second largest city in Maine, the state ranked by 
		the FBI as the least violent in the nation. 
		 
		The number of those killed on Wednesday was only slightly below the 
		average number of homicides in Maine for an entire year.  
		 
		But King said the medical center's staff has undergone mass casualty 
		event training and that it felt like "the entire hospital" rushed into 
		the facility to help out. Eight shooting victims, including five who are 
		stable and three in critical condition, remained in the hospital on 
		Thursday.  
		
		
		  
		
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            View of Central Maine Medical Center where victims are being treated 
			after deadly mass shootings in Lewiston, Maine, U.S. October 26, 
			2023. REUTERS/Nicholas Pfosi 
            
			  
            "We really just did what we would normally do, just at maximum 
			capacity and with maximum effort," King said. "It was inspiring to 
			see how all our staff responded, how everybody stepped up to the 
			plate."  
			 
			While there is one on-call after hours surgeon, upward of 30 
			surgeons were on site within minutes of the first ambulances 
			arriving at the hospital, King said. 
			 
			As one victim after another was rushed into the emergency room - 
			more than a dozen gunshot victims eventually arrived - doctors grew 
			concerned that the medical center's blood supply would not hold out. 
			That forced King and other surgeons to do everything medically 
			possible to stem the loss of blood among patients.  
			 
			Supplies held out, King said, in large part due to work by the 
			medical center's trauma program manager, Tammy Lachance, to quickly 
			secure extra blood from nearby hospitals.  
			 
			In the aftermath of the shooting, King said the most difficult thing 
			for him and other staff members, some of whom had family and loved 
			ones who were killed, is coming to terms with the loss of life and 
			tragedy that befell Lewiston, especially as the adrenaline of 
			treating victims wears off. 
			 
			With the shooter still at large on Thursday, law enforcement 
			officers outside the hospital carrying long guns and wearing 
			bulletproof vests were seen guarding entrances and keeping onlookers 
			away. 
            
			  
			"This is a close-knit community. Maine is fairly small, everybody 
			knows everybody to some extent," King said. "This shooting hits 
			really hard in a city like Lewiston and a state like Maine."  
			 
			(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in Lewiston and Brad Brooks in 
			Longmont, Colorado; editing by Paul Thomasch and Bill Berkrot) 
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