New Orleans Convention Center Once Again a Last Resort - This Time for Medical Care

In the same concrete structure where thousands of fleeing families waited in vain for food and water, they now wait for medical care.


Angela Jaster was wearing a turtleneck when she fell and broke her arm and so for days, she didn't change her shirt because she couldn't raise her arm.

The swelling stretched the fabric. Even though the pain was nearly unbearable, she did not consider going to the hospital, because in this flooded city there is only one for the uninsured and it doesn't treat broken bones.

It was only when the pain sent her into a hyperventilating panic several weeks later that her family called an ambulance and had her taken to the convention center.

In the same concrete structure where thousands of fleeing families waited in vain for food and water, they now wait for medical care, dispensed by a skeletal staff of doctors working out of a collection of military tents.

Inside their plastic and canvas walls, the doctors can only offer the most rudimentary care: They can X-ray bones, but not set them. They can draw blood and diagnose an ailment, but not treat it beyond prescribing pills. And with no ER and no capacity to operate, they can't do much more than stabilize trauma patients before sending them by ambulance elsewhere, often far away.

These tents are all that remain of Charity Hospital, the 270-year-old institution which for generations was the medical epicenter of the city's uninsured.

With their building flooded, the doctors of the disbanded hospital set up the tents first in a parking lot, then secured a lease inside the convention center. Yet even this bare-bones service is in jeopardy, as the convention center - the city's main economic engine - plans to reopen.

In just a few weeks, the hospital has been told, it will have to move the tents once again. Their options include a vacant department store, said Don Smithburg, CEO of the Louisiana State University Medical Center, which operates Charity.

"We're moving from one temporary fix to another," he said.

In spite of the space's obvious limitations, the convention center was in fact an improvement, he said. It's centrally located and its large parking bays provide arriving ambulances good access. Unlike the exposed parking lots where doctors previously pitched their tents, they now have a roof over their heads.

But the city's sputtering economy badly needs the revenue generated by the 95 yearly conventions which in previous years pumped nearly $1 billion into local hotels, restaurants and other venues, said Sabrina Written, spokeswoman for the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.

"It's the economic lifeblood of the city. In order for us to stand up the economy, the convention center needs to open," she said.

For the poor in New Orleans' crumbling health care system, tents have replaced buildings and plastic has replaced walls as the temporary appears to have become permanent.

The ones it hurts the most are people like Angela Jaster, a 51-year-old social worker who suffered an excruciating, yet not life-threatening, injury.

Patients in imminent danger are quickly shipped off by ambulance to one of the seven private emergency rooms in the area.

It's those who are not quite at death's door who end up waiting, often as long as six hours, to be seen. If their ailments cannot be treated with a prescription, they are referred to a hospital elsewhere. Often, those hospitals are far away.

In Jaster's case, the doctors X-rayed her arm inside a tent where images of broken limbs hung like posters. But with no orthopedist on call, she was given an appointment at a hospital a 1 1/2-hour's drive away to get a cast.

"I don't have a car. The bus leaves in the evening, they can only see me in the morning - and there's no vacancies in the hotels," said Jaster, who a month after her fall has run out of options and says she plans to let the break heal on its own, treating the pain with nothing more than ibuprofen, a non-prescription painkiller.

Hers is a medical problem treatable in two visits: One to apply the cast and a second to take it off. Those with long-term health problems requiring multiple hospital visits are among the worst off.

This content continues onto the next page...
comments powered by Disqus