![]() Over the ten years, as you look back and you reflect, and as I’ve learned more and more about the sisters and realizing the stuff they go through and have went through, um, it gives you that sense of the resiliancy. But, that was the first thing that I did was just stood in their doorway and have that moment of reflection that I did get to see them again and there were going to be people that weren’t going to get to see their family. Kepley recalls, “Getting home at 3 AM, you know all my kids were asleep. Obviously, Memorial Hall was overwhelmed pretty quickly and so they opened up McAuley.” Lewis says, “You know, we were helping bring people in on desk chairs, on doors, and just, you know, trying to just get people in. So, everybody who was hurt in the community, the first thing they do is, ‘We’ve gotta get to the hospital.’ But they didn’t know the hospital had been hit too,” says Miller. “The hospital is a beacon of hope and health. And my heart sank, because I knew that we needed to help our people, be we also knew there was people that were really in bad shape out there,” says Kepley. “North side, you could look out the window and just see the path of destruction. All at the time that I could think about was that my mom would have to hear it.” Lewis says, “They were afraid that the hospital was going to explode, and so I remember running down 26th street and all at once like everything, the sound just closed. You know I told my husband, I said, ‘You know I gotta go.’ I got out of the truck and I said, ‘I’ll talk to you later.’ And I didn’t realize it would be another 27 hours before I went back,” says Miranda Lewis, Former Mercy Media Relations Coordinator. “I got a text message from the hospital saying the hospital had been hit. But the minute we stepped out of that area, it was like go to work mode,” says Ashley Miller, Mercy RN Coronary Care Unit Night of May 22nd. “In the closet, all I could think about was my family. There’s moments, ‘Am I going home? Was this morning the last time I saw my family?'” says Kevin Kepley, Mercy RN Coronary Care Unit Night of May 22nd. And we hit the middle of it and there was the moment when we all thought we were done and then the second part of it hit and we knew it was even worse than the first part. Umm, and everybody did the best we could, you know. ![]() “Everybody took cover and we were there for what seemed like an eternity. Hundreds of lives were impacted by just that one building with hundreds of stories. ( KODE) – Of all the buildings that were destroyed by the tornado, the Mercy Hospital building was one of the most critical. I will not take a family member to this hospital if it can be avoided there will NOT be a new grad, inexperienced RN providing my family members care. In over 30 years in the medical field, this was the only hospital I worked at that would hire new grads to work in critical care areas, such as ER, ICU, etc. Very poor pay scale for experienced RN's. ![]() Verbal abuse by co-workers and doctors was also a typical occurrence and an accepted behavior. Managers cronies got better assignments and undeserved recognition. Favoritism was an operating standard throughout the hospital. That made me very uncomfortable and also made me wonder what was said about me when I wasn't around. Management poorly trained and unprofessional heard the manager in PACU and the GI manager talk badly about co-workers. I left after ten months.Įxtremely run down and dirty behind the scenes patients and their families would be appalled. Within weeks of being hired, I realized this was a horrible place. I would stop working as an RN before I would consider going back to work at Freeman Hospital. ![]()
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