View the Online Newspaper
Subscribe to the Newspaper
Publish your Stuff
Need Help? Click Here
Search: Site   Web
Print Story | E-Mail Story | Font Size

Other Articles in this Category

  • Man arrested on suspicion of child porn
    3 hours 45 minutes ago
  • Peterson airmen headed to Iraq
    3 hours 45 minutes ago
  • Hispanic arts, culture champion dies
    2 hours 42 minutes ago
  • Hospital's history in art form
    2 hours 27 minutes ago
  • Former triathlete is back in the game
    2 hours 28 minutes ago
  • What is this?

    Save & Share this Article

    Burn care is tough, long work, with moments of joy

    Comments 0 | Recommend 0

    THE GAZETTE

    They arrive after accidents. Tipped pots of boiling water. Spilled caustic chemicals. House fires and car crashes.

    They show up from assaults. Babies put in microwaves and children intentionally splashed with scalding water.

    They are the patients of burn units, a small group of specialized treatment centers that take on one of the most severe traumas.

    Two Colorado Springs children, 9-year-old Dontrell Gardner and 3-year-old Amarjahan Joseph, have gone to one of the nation’s top pediatric burn centers, Shriners Hospital in Galveston, after their mother allegedly doused them with gasoline and lit them on fire.

    Dr. Cleon W. Goodwin is director of Western States Burn Center at North Colorado Medical Center and a past president of the American Burn Association. He said burn units evolved because the numbers of burn victims are small compared with other types of patients such as cancer victims, yet their care is costly and specialized.

    They are one of the toughest places to work in the medical profession, he said. Staff psychologists and psychiatrists spend as much time counseling staff members as patients.

    “The hardest replacement to recruit, I think, is to recruit somebody to work in a burn center,” he said.

    The work is exhaustive and long. The stories are usually tragic. Patients can spend up to a year in the hospital, meaning staffers experience their emotional ups and downs. And there’s the emotional challenge of coping with the physical appearance of the trauma.

    A ruptured appendix, he said, is not on display, but “you can see the eyes that are burned staring right at you.”

    Even so, there is hope and healing in these halls. Staff and patients share small victories. A child comes off a respirator or a patient sits in a chair again for the first time.

    At Shriners, the atmosphere can be downright “jovial,” said Dr. Ralph E. Hathaway. The hospital strives to bring in clowns and celebrate healing, and children in pain find a reason to smile. “You walk in there and you say, ‘My God, I can’t believe this. These kids are so positive.’”

    CONTACT THE WRITER: 636-0198 or bnewsome@gazette.com


    See archived 'Metro' Stories »
     


    Reader Comments
    We want our site to be a place where people discuss and debate Ideas that foster stronger communities. We built this for you. Please take care of it. Tolerate broad thinking, but take action against obscene or hateful material. Make it a credible and safe place worth preserving and sharing.

    Jobs
    Autos
    Real Estate
    Classifieds
    Place an Ad
    Search for Jobs - Monster.com
       
    Featured Events

     
    • Find an Event
    • 5 Day Event Calendar
    Thu24
    Fri25
    Sat26
    Sun27
    Mon28
    Publish Your Stuff
    Poll
    Lottery
    Bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could cost taxpayers $25 billion. Worth it?
    Yes
    No
    Enter The Code To Vote
     
    powered by
    google
    Search
            Search: Web    Site