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About the Author

Includes the name: Sheri Fink, M.D.

Also includes: Sheri Fink (1)

Image credit: Lars Klove / ProPublica

Works by Sheri Lee Fink

Associated Works

The Best American Science Writing 2010 (2010) — Contributor — 115 copies, 2 reviews
The Best American Magazine Writing 2010 (2010) — Contributor — 47 copies

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Five Days at Memorial Discussion Thread in Club Read 2014 (July 2021)

Reviews

180 reviews
The author is to be congratulated for the impressive depth of her reportage; she clearly has a strong point of view as to what happened at Memorial and why, but doesn't let her opinion get in the way of the reporting - she lets the participants tell the story, and tell it from their perspective and lets the readers draw their own conclusions.

And the most charitable interpretation would seem to be that people of good intention, working in difficult conditions, with sleep deprivation, little show more communication with the outside world and worry about their own families, make bad decisions that seemed justifiable at the time, but looked at with the clarity of distance and hindsight clearly were not. Was this criminal? Is it even punishable ? Is it not the lack of planning for a predictable disaster actually the problem? Wasn't it in fact all caused by criminal negligence? But who's?

This book raises all of these difficult issues whilst taking you step by step through a series of terrible decisions - at each point you want to shake the participants and yell "no no, make the other choice".

Compelling. Terrifying. Sobering
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½
When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, it was unprepared. The entire country was unprepared and it was unnecessarily disastrous. In Five Days at Memorial, Sheri Fink looks at what happened in a single hospital during the hurricane and in the days that followed, as power failed and the people inside began to wonder if they would all survive. This is non-fiction that reads like a novel, with the days in the hospital described in chaotic detail. Things were a mess and there was a distinct lack show more of leadership, both within the hospital and on the part of the hospital's corporation and the American government outside of it.

In the aftermath, after everyone had left and the flood waters receded, there were found to have been too many deaths, especially when compared to the similarly struck Charity Hospital. There were rumors that some of the medical personnel had taken matters into their own hands, believing that certain patients were too ill to be rescued, if indeed rescue was even coming. Several patients had all died during the same time frame and all had high levels of morphine and sedatives in their bodies.

An investigation is opened, spurred along by intense media interest, and focusses on two nurses and the physician Anna Pou. Five Days at Memorial follows the investigation and the lives of those who were affected closely as lines are drawn between those who think this is a politically motivated witch hunt and those concerned that people got away with murder.

This is a gut-wrenching story. I changed my mind about what went wrong, who was to blame and what the motivations were for those medical personnel several times throughout. It was interesting to note how adeptly the corporations involved sidestepped any real accountability. The hospital CEO and a few other executive officers were present during the debacle, but stayed largely in the one wing of the hospital that retained power and air conditioning, relaxing and watching TV and eating chicken noodle soup while across the way patients died in 110 degrees heat and without respirators. The CEO failed to lead, although he did graciously bring nurses some coffee. It seemed to have occurred to no one to move the patients into the one place where their suffering could have been alleviated. And after rescue, while those same patients lay on the floor of an airport with inadequate care, those same executive officers were flown away in the corporate jet.

Meanwhile, the medical and support personnel were given no or conflicting information. There was no plan of rescue. Those patients flown out had to be carried down several flights of stairs, pushed through a maintenance shaft, driven through a car park, then carried up several flights of rickety stairs to a decaying heliport. Helicopters left without passengers when they were delivered too slowly. Seriously ill patients had to lay outside in the sun for hours waiting for the next helicopter to fly in. And there were constant rumors and fears that the hospital would be overrun at any time by gangs of looters.

Five Days at Memorial brings those days to vivid light. It was compelling and uncomfortable reading. The book has been nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award. It would be a worthy winner.
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½
This is an important book. Physician and author Sheri Fink chronicles the horrific story of what happened to patients and doctors who were stranded at Memorial Medical Center after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans. Dr. Anna Pou and two nurses were later charged with euthanizing critically ill patients who were not expected to survive. Fink is bracingly fair throughout--you won't find any villains here, just desperate people mired in conditions that would embarrass a Third World show more country. The real villains, in fact, were the local, state and federal officials who failed to plan for a disaster that everyone knew was coming. Fink is also a good storyteller: even though readers who followed this well-publicized case will know how it turned out, the second half of the book is surprisingly suspenseful. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Five Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital, an investigative piece written by Sheri Fink, is a vivid portrait of tragedy that occurred in New Orleans when it was devastated by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

The first half of the narrative details the five days in which Memorial was battered by Hurricane Katrina and then isolated by the flood waters that destroyed much of the city. It is a gripping, day by day, often hour by hour, account Fink has created from official show more reports and interviews with the staff, patients and others trapped in the city hospital. Fink relates the harrowing circumstances that developed in Memorial as resources dwindled and services failed, and the thoughts, experiences and emotions of those fearing they may not survive. However this moving and powerful narrative leads to the real focus of Five Days at Memorial - the alleged actions of some of the medical staff trapped at the hospital, most notably Dr Anna Pou, accused of euthanising as many as a dozen patients, and possibly more, during the emergency.

The second half of the book recounts the legal aftermath of those allegations which resulted in Pou and two nurses being arrested for multiple accounts of second degree murder. It describes the investigation into the deaths by the the attorney general, the coroner and other medical and legal experts and raises issues related to the ethics of disaster management in a medical setting. This section is less emotive and therefore less gripping, but still thought provoking and very readable.

Sheri Fink was uniquely placed to write this book as a doctor with experience working in disaster and war zones, and extensive journalistic experience, including authoring "War Hospital: A True Story of Surgery and Survival" in 2003. Clearly Fink engaged in exhaustive research into the the events, and their aftermath, at Memorial, drawing on multiple resources, resulting in a detailed perspective of the tragedy. I don't think it is quite true that the account is written without bias though. It seems to me, by both her choice of language and some of the details she chose to focus on, that Fink formed a opinion about the events that took place inside Memorial, and her assessment seeped into the narrative.

I found Five Days at Memorial to be an engrossing, intriguing and poignant read. It is a story that needed to be told and I desperately hope that governments and bureaucrats worldwide have learned from the woeful lack of preparedness, planning, communication and resources exhibited during this disaster as a whole, and from the specific events that occurred at Memorial.
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½

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