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Sock Full of Boiled Dimes
06-04-2007, 10:22 PM
No wait, its that other thing.

The callous indiffrence to another human's suffering.

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-king20may20,0,1577522,full.story

In the emergency room at Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital, Edith Isabel Rodriguez was seen as a complainer.

"Thanks a lot, officers," an emergency room nurse told Los Angeles County police who brought in Rodriguez early May 9 after finding her in front of the Willowbrook hospital yelling for help. "This is her third time here."

The 43-year-old mother of three had been released from the emergency room hours earlier, her third visit in three days for abdominal pain. She'd been given prescription medication and a doctor's appointment.

Turning to Rodriguez, the nurse said, "You have already been seen, and there is nothing we can do," according to a report by the county office of public safety, which provides security at the hospital.

Parked in the emergency room lobby in a wheelchair after police left, she fell to the floor. She lay on the linoleum, writhing in pain, for 45 minutes, as staffers worked at their desks and numerous patients looked on.

Aside from one patient who briefly checked on her condition, no one helped her. A janitor cleaned the floor around her as if she were a piece of furniture. A closed-circuit camera captured everyone's apparent indifference.

Arriving to find Rodriguez on the floor, her boyfriend unsuccessfully tried to enlist help from the medical staff and county police — even a 911 dispatcher, who balked at sending rescuers to a hospital.

Alerted to the "disturbance" in the lobby, police stepped in — by running Rodriguez's record. They found an outstanding warrant and prepared to take her to jail. She died before she could be put into a squad car.

How Rodriguez came to die at a public hospital, without help from the many people around her, is now the subject of much public hand-wringing. The county chief administrative office has launched an investigation, as has the Sheriff's Department homicide division and state and federal health regulators.

The triage nurse involved has resigned, and the emergency room supervisor has been reassigned. Additional disciplinary actions could come this week.

The incident has brought renewed attention to King-Harbor, a long-troubled hospital formerly known as King/Drew.

The Times reconstructed the last 90 minutes of Rodriguez's life based on accounts by three people who have seen the confidential videotape, a detailed police report, interviews with relatives and an account of the boyfriend's 911 call.

"I am completely dumbfounded," said county Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, who has seen the video recording.

"It's an indictment of everybody," he said. "If this woman was in pain, which she appears to be, if she was writhing in pain, which she appears to be, why did nobody bother … to take the most minimal interest in her, in her welfare? It's just shocking. It really is."

The story of Rodriguez's demise began at 12:34 a.m. when two county police officers received a radio call of a "female down" and yelling for help near the front entrance of King-Harbor, according to the police report.

When they approached Rodriguez to ask what was wrong, she responded in a "loud and belligerent voice that her stomach was hurting," the report states. She said she had 10 gallstones and that one of them had burst.

A staff member summoned by the police arrived with a wheelchair and rolled her into the emergency room. Among her belongings, one officer found her latest discharge slip from the hospital, which instructed her to "return to ER if nausea, vomit, more pain or any worse."

When the officers talked to the emergency room nurse, she "did not show any concern" for Rodriguez, the police report said. The report identifies the nurse as Linda Witland, but county officials confirmed that her name is Linda Ruttlen, who began working for the county in July 1992.

Ruttlen could not be reached for comment.

During that initial discussion with Ruttlen, Rodriguez slipped off her wheelchair onto the floor and curled into a fetal position, screaming in pain, the report said.

Ruttlen told her to "get off the floor and onto a chair," the police report said. Two officers and a different nurse helped her back to the wheelchair and brought her close to the reception counter, where a staff member asked her to remain seated.

The officers left and Rodriguez again pitched forward onto the floor, apparently unable to get up, according to people who saw the videotape and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Because the tape does not have sound, it is not possible to determine whether Rodriguez was screaming or what she was saying, the viewers said. Because of the camera's angle, in most scenes, she is but a grainy blob, sometimes obstructed, moving around on the floor.

When Rodriguez's boyfriend, Jose Prado, returned to the hospital after an errand and saw her on the floor, he alerted nurses and then called 911.

According to Sheriff's Capt. Ray Peavy, the dispatcher said, "Look, sir, it indicates you're already in a hospital setting. We cannot send emergency equipment out there to take you to a hospital you're already at."

Prado then knocked on the door of the county police, near the emergency room, and said, "My girlfriend needs help and they don't want to help her," according to the police report. A sergeant told him to consult the medical staff, the report said. Minutes later, Prado came back to the sergeant and said, "They don't want to help her." Again, he was told to see the medical staff.

Within minutes, police began taking Rodriguez into custody. When they told Prado that there was a warrant for Rodriguez's arrest, he asked if she would get medical care wherever she was taken. They assured him that she would. He then kissed her and left, the police report said.

She was wheeled to the patrol vehicle and the door was opened so that she could get into the back. When officers asked her to get up, she did not respond. An officer tried to revive her with an ammonia inhalant, then checked for a pulse and found none. She died in the emergency room after resuscitation efforts failed.

According to preliminary coroner's findings, the cause was a perforated large bowel, which caused an infection. Experts say the condition can bring about death fairly suddenly.

Hours after her death, county Department of Health Services spokesman Michael Wilson sent a note informing county supervisors' offices about the incident but saying that that police had been called because Rodriguez's boyfriend became disruptive.

Health services Director Dr. Bruce Chernof said Friday that subsequent information showed Prado was not, in fact, disruptive. Chernof otherwise refused to comment, citing the open investigation, patient privacy and "other issues."

Peavy, who supervises the sheriff's homicide unit, said that although his investigation is not complete, "the county police did absolutely, absolutely nothing wrong as far as we're concerned."

The coroner's office may relay its final findings to the district attorney's office for consideration of criminal charges against hospital staff members, Peavy said.

"I can't speak for the coroner and I can't speak for the D.A., but that is certainly a possibility," he added.

Marcela Sanchez, Rodriguez's sister, said she has been making tamales and selling them to raise money for her sister's funeral and burial. Her family has been called by attorneys seeking to represent them, but they do not know whom to trust.

She said the latest revelations, which she learned from The Times, are very troubling.

"Wow," she said. "If she was on the floor for that long, how in the heck did nobody help her then?

"Where was their heart? Where was their humanity? … When Jose came in, everybody was just sitting, looking. Where were they?"

Sanchez said her sister was a giving person who always took an interest in people in need, unlike those who watched her suffer. "She would have taken her shoes to give to somebody with no shoes," she said. Rodriguez, a California native, performed odd jobs and lived alternately with different relatives.

David Janssen, the county's chief administrative officer, said the incident is being taken very seriously. In a rare move, his office took over control of the inquiry from the county health department and the office of public safety.

"There's no excuse — and I don't think anybody believes that there is," Janssen said.

Over the last 3 1/2 years, King-Harbor has reeled from crisis to crisis.

Based on serious patient-care lapses, it has lost its national accreditation and federal funding. Hundreds of staff members have been disciplined and services cut.

Janssen said he was concerned that the incident would divert attention from preparing the hospital for a crucial review in six weeks that is to determine whether it can regain federal funding.

If the hospital fails, it could be forced to close.

"It certainly isn't going to help," Janssen said.

At the same time, he said, the preliminary investigation suggests that the fault primarily rests with the nurse who resigned. "I think it's a tragic, tragic incident, but it's not a systemic one."

Supervisor Gloria Molina, who hadn't seen the videotape, said she wasn't sure the hospital had reformed.

"What's so discouraging and disappointing for me is that it seems that this hospital at this point in time hasn't really transformed itself — and I'm worried about it," she said.

Supervisor Mike Antonovich said he believed care had improved at the hospital overall, but added, "It's unconscionable that anyone would ignore a patient in obvious distress."

Rodriguez's son, Edmundo, 25, said he still couldn't understand why his mother died. "It's more than negligence. I can't even think of the word."

His 24-year-old sister, Christina, said, "It just makes it so much harder to grieve. It's so painful."

Lea
06-04-2007, 10:42 PM
WTF?? That's a horrible hospital. Jesus....

Kwiz
06-04-2007, 11:15 PM
Parked in the emergency room lobby in a wheelchair after police left, she fell to the floor. She lay on the linoleum, writhing in pain, for 45 minutes, as staffers worked at their desks and numerous patients looked on.

How the fuck does that happen? Was there not a single person in there with both compassion and common sense? Thinking up ridiculous situations for satire gets harder and harder all the time.

MNJetter
06-05-2007, 12:16 AM
Holy.......something. That's just too sad and shocking for words. I think the lady's son hit the nail on the head when he said "It's more than negligence. I can't even think of the word."

Jiant Flying Panda
06-05-2007, 12:43 AM
What fucking bullshit.

Man, I wonder what was going through her head during the entire thing. This just reminds me how fucked up the world can be.

Hatsumomo
06-05-2007, 12:45 AM
I'm stunned, but I'm not really all that surprised. Humans show a remarkable capability to disregard and abuse others.

Pierrot le Fou
06-05-2007, 01:53 AM
Have any of you folks actually been to an emergency room? It's not hard to understand how it could happen, especially when you consider how many people come to scam painkillers by feigning pain. Yes, it was tragic, but it also probably happens a lot more than you think -- this time they had a video though.

Kusoyaro
06-05-2007, 02:14 AM
although i wonder what is more important; impeding the efforts of people who want free drugs or dead humans. one cares little about druggies and their various methods of scamming when facing the pathetic death this woman endured.

and humans are conditioned to apathy, it is not an intrinsic human characteristic

Pierrot le Fou
06-05-2007, 02:53 AM
Errr, the reason that emergency rooms are so damned crowded in many cases is because the addicts trickle in and make people wait for care. Someone who wants a fix and fakes a migraine, or back injury, or whatever ends up taking time away from someone who actually needs the help. Ignoring the problem and simply doling out painkillers will result in MORE people in the emergency room for fixes. No good.

Kusoyaro
06-05-2007, 03:15 AM
ya
i was thinking whether it is even possible to fix the root cause of issues. what we tend to do is plug seals rather than fix the boat. how can we stop the abusers from even wanting to get free painkillers and shit? i'm pretty sure it's not infinite regression, since it does stop eventually at some point. i think it might be a job social engineers.

amg
06-05-2007, 03:42 AM
Witness the death of a hospital - loss of funding so they can't afford as many or as motivated staff, leading to worse treatment by overworked or apathetic workers. Everyone ends up worse off. Nice

Errr, the reason that emergency rooms are so damned crowded in many cases is because the addicts trickle in and make people wait for care.

It's a problem, sure, but I think density of the legitimately wounded have something to do with it too. Isn't Watts a kind of rough and high-density area? I'm not familiar with the LA area, but I would imagine a hospital there would be pretty busy. Wait times on a bad night can be up to and above 10 hours; I can't imagine many people waiting that long for pills, regardless of addiction.

Ignoring the problem and simply doling out painkillers will result in MORE people in the emergency room for fixes. No good.
I say prescribe painkillers at double the level requested. It becomes a self-repairing problem ;) There's no problem drugs can't fix

Pierrot le Fou
06-05-2007, 04:06 AM
Well, it's also the fact that people without insurance tend to go to the emergency room more too, rather than people getting shot every day (though I'm sure that happens too).

Psychochink
06-05-2007, 04:21 AM
So what do the people with insurance do when they're sick? [I understand nothing about the U.S. health system.]

Jetsetlemming
06-05-2007, 04:30 AM
So what do the people with insurance do when they're sick? [I understand nothing about the U.S. health system.]
They get sick less often as they can afford check-ups and preventative treatment. Someone with insurance ends up in medical emergencies less often; problems don't get the chance to accelerate to that point. Of course, people who fall down their stairs or get shot or stabbed end up in the emergency room just as often.

Psychochink
06-05-2007, 05:22 AM
So, hang on, what is the extent of the public health care system in the U.S.? What are you entitled to receive without personal outlay?

Jiant Flying Panda
06-05-2007, 05:53 AM
Have any of you folks actually been to an emergency room? It's not hard to understand how it could happen, especially when you consider how many people come to scam painkillers by feigning pain. Yes, it was tragic, but it also probably happens a lot more than you think -- this time they had a video though.

Yeah but I thought by Federal law the hospital HAS to give you treatment.

Jetsetlemming
06-05-2007, 06:05 AM
So, hang on, what is the extent of the public health care system in the U.S.? What are you entitled to receive without personal outlay?
Poor people get Medicaid. Old people get Medicare. Most people get Health, Dental, and Eye insurance from their employer.
Yeah but I thought by Federal law the hospital HAS to give you treatment.
Yes, but they have to give treatment to everyone else, too. Typically going to the emergency room has an EXTREMELY long wait, given you're going there for an emergency. Last time I was in the emergency room was for a ripped open knee, bleeding everywhere. I had waited 20 minutes and lost feeling in my leg by the time a doctor saw me. Took 8 stitches (6 on the outside, two on the inside). The feeling came back within a few weeks. The scar's starting to fade a bit, it's been like 5 years since that. :P
Most of the time, if you're a walk-in to the emergency room, you've got to wait in line behind everyone who walked in ahead of you. Seeing as you were capable of getting transport to the hospital, they aren't expecting you to keel over any minute. Unless you've got something that obviously puts you ahead of everyone else with an emergency, like a missing limb or a knife sticking out your face, you've got to wait in line.
Arriving via ambulance is a different matter. It's recommended you call one if you do indeed get stabbed in the face.

Mastiker
06-05-2007, 06:29 AM
Arriving via ambulance is a different matter. It's recommended you call one if you do indeed get stabbed in the face.

That would be a 911 distress call I would love to hear.

"911; what's your emergency?"
"Yes, um... I believe I'm stabbed in the face."
"Stabbed in the face you say?"
"Um... *poke* *violent scream* yeah. I'm pretty sure."
"Ambulance?"
"Ambulance."

Pierrot le Fou
06-05-2007, 07:36 AM
People with insurance can get preventative care/routine checkups covered, therefore they make fewer trips to the emergency room. If you can get regular diagnostic tests done by calling your regular physician, and a long medical history (as in yearly checks for a decade or four), then you can call up your GP (General Practitioner) and say, "I've been having some headaches recently, I'm wondering if it's stress, or if I should come in for some tests" and the doctor will look at your medical history, see that you have high blood pressure, assume that may be it, and proceed as necessary, or advise a way to make it go away with instructions to come in for tests if it doesn't.

On the other hand, someone without insurance and regular checks has absolutely no idea why their head is hurting. And if it's really bad, and it won't go away, they can't just call up their doctor to ask what they should do. They go to the hospital.

Furthermore, a GP needs to be paid, whereas an emergency room is required to give you medical treatment, even if you can't pay for it.

Firefly
06-05-2007, 08:11 AM
Hm, isn't the place where you wait more of an "urgent care", than emergency room...? The local hospital here has an (almost) 24 hour urgent care center that has doctors to treat things like broken bones, sinus infections, that sort of thing. The wait is usually really long. Then there's the emergency room, which is for people that get knifed in the face.

EDIT: last year, when I had 2nd and 3rd degree burns on my leg, the Urgent care was closed, but when we asked about the emergency room, they didn't admit me because it wasn't a matter of life or death, and I had to wait till the next morning to see my doctor.

Jetsetlemming
06-05-2007, 09:58 AM
EDIT: last year, when I had 2nd and 3rd degree burns on my leg, the Urgent care was closed, but when we asked about the emergency room, they didn't admit me because it wasn't a matter of life or death, and I had to wait till the next morning to see my doctor.
3rd degree burns and "not serious enough" don't really go together. You sure the burns were 3rd degree? That's the point where you start losing layers of flesh and turning black, you know.

Trump
06-05-2007, 12:44 PM
I think many people have lost sight of the fact that the "victim" here had already been to the emergency room and had been diagnosed. What were the chances the diagnosis would have been any different this time? While I am not defending the hospitals actions in regard to leaving her to writhe on the floor, the waits in the emergency room are usually fairly long unless you are gushing blood at a life threatening rate.

And about insurance vs. uninsured, also consider those who are insured tend to lead healthier lives in general since they have the money to eat healthier and exercise, etc.

Radiance
06-05-2007, 05:12 PM
Hm, isn't the place where you wait more of an "urgent care", than emergency room...? The local hospital here has an (almost) 24 hour urgent care center that has doctors to treat things like broken bones, sinus infections, that sort of thing. The wait is usually really long. Then there's the emergency room, which is for people that get knifed in the face.

EDIT: last year, when I had 2nd and 3rd degree burns on my leg, the Urgent care was closed, but when we asked about the emergency room, they didn't admit me because it wasn't a matter of life or death, and I had to wait till the next morning to see my doctor.

I would have sued their asses off. 2nd and 3rd degree burns can send you into shock and cause further complications, up to and including death.

Angelyne
06-05-2007, 08:41 PM
Look at the context of the situation: This occurred in a LA hospital to a patient with a Latino last name (Edith Isabel Rodriguez). Now I don't want to play the race card, but a lot of emergency rooms in border states have had to shut down or cut back services because illegal immigrants use them as their regular doctor's office. The emergency room is required to give them care and then they skip out on paying the bill; this results in emergency rooms losing a lot of money. Google it--it's a big problem in a lot of areas. They probably took one look at her last name and just assumed she would do the same.

Not saying that this is an excuse for poor treatment, but I'm not very suprised.

Firefly
06-06-2007, 03:55 AM
3rd degree burns and "not serious enough" don't really go together. You sure the burns were 3rd degree? That's the point where you start losing layers of flesh and turning black, you know.


Yep. The central part of the burn, where the water initially hit, was 3rd degree burns. The area around that was 2nd degree. Went to the doctors early the next morning. I couldn't walk on that leg properly for weeks, and used crutches around the house. I lost feeling in the upper part of my thigh, and I still don't have feeling in the area where the burns were third degree. (I also have a huge scar). Kindof like that lady who got third degree burns from the McDonald's coffee, then sued McDonald's because the coffee was too hot >_> Only this wasn't the fault o McDonalds or driving. :watson:

xinster
06-06-2007, 04:37 AM
lolz ya got me!

xinster
06-06-2007, 04:38 AM
Yep. The central part of the burn, where the water initially hit, was 3rd degree burns. The area around that was 2nd degree. Went to the doctors early the next morning. I couldn't walk on that leg properly for weeks, and used crutches around the house. I lost feeling in the upper part of my thigh, and I still don't have feeling in the area where the burns were third degree. (I also have a huge scar). Kindof like that lady who got third degree burns from the McDonald's coffee, then sued McDonald's because the coffee was too hot >_> Only this wasn't the fault o McDonalds or driving. :watson:

she got 3rd degree burns? like on her esophagus?

Firefly
06-06-2007, 05:28 AM
No. She spilled it on her lap while driving.

japanat
06-06-2007, 06:21 AM
Actually, the details of the McD's case are urban legend. Stella's (her name) grandson was driving, and pulled over and stopped so the woman could add cream and sugar. Then the coffee spilled, and she got 3rd degree burns over 16% of her body. McDonald's, as the American Coffee Association recommends, serves their coffee at 180-190deg F.; a temperature which can cause 3rd degree burns in 2-7sec. Let's see you get your pants off that quickly inside a car when you're 74...

She initially sued for $20,000 dollars, the cost of 2 years of medical care, including multiple skin grafts and abradings. MikkieD refused, and she was awarded over 2 mil, which the judge dropped. Total damages and punitive, $600,000 plus. Then they settled out of court before the appeal.

Here are the true details, if you want to see:
http://www.stellaawards.com/stella.html


Anyways, Firefly, did you go to the ER immediately upon receiving the burns? And they turned you away? That's negligence, plain and simple. If you had waited until the next day for the initial check, then there wouldn't be nearly as much they could do, but they would still need to do wound care, possibly even the removal of some of the dead tissue before it could become gangrenous and poison your blood.

Either way, they should have taken you in. You should sue them for it, if you have any documentation. Now, I'm not one who likes to sue for all kinds of goodies, I hate frivolous lawsuits. But filing a lawsuit in this case for any additional care required due to being turned away, as well as your legal bills and, say, $1 in damages, would force the hospital's management team (nowadays, rarely physicians themselves) to revise their policies and retrain their staff. It might not help you, but it'll make a difference to the next person caught in the same situation.

Firefly
06-06-2007, 06:58 AM
Honestly, I had no idea about these legal issues, I've never sued, been sued, or had an intention of suing anyone. It was about 1 or 2 am, so when we were told the urgent care was closed, and that the emergency room was for life/death situations (people brought in ambulances) we (being myself and my roommate) just kind of went with it. This was on the phone with someone at the hospital. Kinda stupid, we should've went, go ahead, scold me >_>

The next day though, when the doctor looked at it, she removed some of the dead skin (It was insane- I was watching her peel off skin, but it didn't hurt. Was the oddest thing.) And even after that, I was still having to peel away dead skin (she prescribed me pills and topical ointments and showed me how to care for it, however, I wasn't allowed to wrap it for a few days due to the possibility of infection.)

I still have the damn scar, it's been about a year, almost exactly. :meh:

akitaka
06-06-2007, 12:00 PM
Ouch. 3rd degree burns > broken limbs. In the former, you can permanently lose mobility of some limbs, and rehab can only do so much.

I have no idea in how hospitals prioritize patient order; I came in once when my arms/legs stopped functioning, and my body temperature rising to 107F due to an insane mono spell, and got care faster than some people before me. These were people with missing thumb AND index fingers, broken limbs, nasty cuts, etc.

I was lucid enough to talk and wait in a wheelchair a la stephen hawking, but was admitted and cared for faster than I can recall. Meanwhile, joe shmoe in the waiting room is looking at the clock with a bad of ice/fingers >.>

Trump
06-06-2007, 12:46 PM
A high fever like that involves different type of care than missing digits. Perhaps that had something to do with it. They can treat you at the same time as the person needing a finger reattached.

japanat
06-06-2007, 01:15 PM
I have no idea in how hospitals prioritize patient order; I came in once when my arms/legs stopped functioning, and my body temperature rising to 107F due to an insane mono spell, and got care faster than some people before me. These were people with missing thumb AND index fingers, broken limbs, nasty cuts, etc.

I was lucid enough to talk and wait in a wheelchair a la stephen hawking, but was admitted and cared for faster than I can recall. Meanwhile, joe shmoe in the waiting room is looking at the clock with a bad of ice/fingers >.>Triage basically looks at survivability first. If the patient cannot be helped, they will usually (but by no means always) concentrate their care on the patient in the worst shape who could possibly still survive.

Missing fingers hurt like hell, but they won't kill you if the bleeding is under control. A 107deg fever will boil your brain. The fever will get care first, not to mention the associated paralysis.

akitaka
06-06-2007, 01:59 PM
Thanks for clarifying, both of you. I was under the assumption that a bad flu was simply easier to solve given a little bit of time as opposed to missing limbs/burns/bleeding; then again, had no idea that a high body temp could cook the gray matter.

I guess an episode of "Lost" could calm down some of that pain, or something...seeing as the television set was quite the rage in the waiting room.

Stephy
06-06-2007, 03:30 PM
Have any of you folks actually been to an emergency room? It's not hard to understand how it could happen, especially when you consider how many people come to scam painkillers by feigning pain. Yes, it was tragic, but it also probably happens a lot more than you think -- this time they had a video though.
Yeah, this is true.

Also, when I was working in the hospital it's just a daily routine where you see people complaining or some shouting in pain and some not in pain but making it seem like they are so they can get immediate care. The staff just gets used to it after years of working like that it becomes routine to see. That's the atmosphere (screaming/crying etc). Doesn't make it right, but I'm not shocked about this.

Although, I see why staff and police can be used to it, I am surprised no other patients or people around tried to at least check on her sides for that one person.

I'm a bit shocked at the fact the police were arresting her when she showed she was in so much pain. I don't understand that. They can do that?


Yes, but they have to give treatment to everyone else, too. Typically going to the emergency room has an EXTREMELY long wait, given you're going there for an emergency. Last time I was in the emergency room was for a ripped open knee, bleeding everywhere. I had waited 20 minutes and lost feeling in my leg by the time a doctor saw me.
It was two hours until they saw me about my broken foot.

The hospital I worked in kind of sucks with its care to patients so I told my sisters if anything happened me they can't send me to that hospital since I rather die at home. >_>;

Roxie
06-13-2007, 03:15 PM
911 Tapes: Dying Woman Was Denied Help
LOS ANGELES — A woman who lay bleeding on the emergency room floor of a troubled inner-city hospital died after 911 dispatchers refused to contact paramedics or an ambulance to take her to another facility, newly released tapes of the emergency calls reveal.

Edith Isabel Rodriguez, 43, died of a perforated bowel on May 9 at Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital. Her death was ruled accidental by the Los Angeles County coroner's office.

Relatives said Rodriguez was bleeding from the mouth and writhing in pain for 45 minutes while she was at a hospital waiting area. Experts have said she could have survived had she been treated early enough.

County and state authorities are now investigating Rodriguez's death. Relatives reported she died as police were wheeling her out of the hospital after the officers they had asked to help Rodriguez arrested her instead on a parole violation. Sheriff's Department spokesman Duane Allen said Wednesday that the investigation is ongoing.

In the recordings of two 911 calls that day, first obtained by the Los Angeles Times under a California Public Records Act request, callers pleaded for help for Rodriguez but were referred to hospital staff instead.

"I'm in the emergency room. My wife is dying and the nurses don't want to help her out," Rodriguez's boyfriend, Jose Prado, is heard saying in Spanish through an interpreter on the tapes.

"What's wrong with her?" a female dispatcher asked.

"She's vomiting blood," Prado said.

"OK, and why aren't they helping her?" the dispatcher asked.

"They're watching her there and they're not doing anything. They're just watching her," Prado said.

The dispatcher told Prado to contact a doctor and then said paramedics wouldn't pick her up because she was already in a hospital. She later told him to contact county police officers at a security desk.

A second 911 call was placed eight minutes later by a bystander who requested that an ambulance be sent to take Rodriguez to another hospital for care.

"She's definitely sick and there's a guy that's ignoring her," the woman told a male dispatcher.

During the call, the dispatcher argued with the woman over whether there really was an emergency.

"I cannot do anything for you for the quality of the hospital. ... It is not an emergency. It is not an emergency ma'am," he said.

"You're not here to see how they're treating her," the woman replied.

The dispatcher refused to call paramedics and told the woman that she should contact hospital supervisors "and let them know" if she is unhappy.

"May God strike you too for acting the way you just acted," the woman said finally.

"No, negative ma'am, you're the one," he said.

The incident was the latest high-profile lapse at King-Harbor, formerly known as King/Drew. The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors is investigating claims of recent patient care breakdowns, including Rodriguez's case.

Federal inspectors last week said emergency room patients were in "immediate jeopardy" of harm or death, and King-Harbor was given 23 days to shape up or risk losing federal funding.

Dr. Bruce Chernof, director of the county Department of Health Services, which oversees the facility, has called Rodriguez's death "inexcusable" and said it was "important to understand that this was fundamentally a failure of caring." He has said conditions are improving, though.

A call Wednesday seeking comment about the 911 tapes from the department's communications office, which handles information about the hospital, was not immediately returned.

Dr. Roger Peeks, the chief medical officer at the hospital, was placed on "ordered absence" Monday, the Times reported. Health officials declined to elaborate, saying it was a personnel matter. Dr. Robert Splawn, chief medical officer for the health department, was named interim chief medical officer, the newspaper said.