jump to navigation

GW Patient Falls from Ledge July 21, 2008

Posted by Reginald Johnson in Mental Health, News, Uncategorized.
trackback

Yesterday a patient at George Washington University Hospital fell from a fifth-story ledge of the George Washington University Hospital. The patient had been threatening to jump for several hours on that unfortunate afternoon.

Shortly after 12noon, the man climbed onto a ledge. In the time span of about four hours the man shouted and ranted to those on the ground. At around 4pm the young man finally agreed to come down. While trying to get down he lost his footing and wound up hanging on the ledge. He tried shimming down the building and lost his grip. The man fell feet first.

His body partially hit the concrete and a large inflatable air mattress police had set up while trying to coax him down, police said.

A crowd of about 20 people were horrified as they watched the scene unfold.

The man, whose name was not immediately released by police, was still breathing at the scene, readmitted to the hospital and listed in critical condition, said Officer Josh Aldiva, a department spokesman.

The man had been taken to the hospital yesterday after being involved in a car accident.

During the standoff, police and ambulance crews cordoned off much of Washington Circle and several city blocks along New Hampshire Avenue and 23rd Street, between I Street and the circle, snarling traffic and preventing some residents from getting to their nearby homes and apartments.

Witnesses who saw the man climb onto the ledge said he was originally clad in a blue hospital-issued shirt and boxer shorts, with white bandages covering his arms.

By 1 p.m., the man had stripped off his shirt as a group of police, fire and security workers congregated on the rooftop several stories above him and SWAT teams surrounded the building below.

Marina Streznewski, who lives in the 900 block of New Hampshire Ave., a few blocks from where the man fell, said she came out of her home about 1 p.m. to see a gawking crowd snapping photos of the man with their cellphones.

“I looked at some of them, and I saw what was reflected in me — I wanted to tell him, ‘Please don’t jump. It’s not worth it,’ ” Streznewski said.

Comments»

No comments yet — be the first.



Dedicated Web Hosting