Mar 30 2010

i’ll take an emergency any day

Published by MarkHarmel at 12:58 pm under healthcare,portraits,process,technique,worklife

I’ll even stage one if needed.

heart attack

A racing gurney and looks of concern make me happy

I’ve been fortunate to have done most of my healthcare photography at major medical institutions. Mostly at University of California, Los Angeles and recently at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. These are major trauma and research centers. The places you want to go when you have a major health issue like a heart attack.

heart attack EKG

An EKG and exam in the emergency room

This series was shot to illustrate an integrated team approach to handling a heart attack from the arrival and evaluation in the ER and the examination and potential intervention in the angiogram suite.

Evaluation in the angiogram suite heart attack

Opening a blocked blood vessel in the angiogram suite

Even though this case was a simulated heart attack I always enjoy the challenge of making the cases look realistic. They need to pass “the hallway test” of colleagues who will see the photos when this “Report to the Community 2010″ is printed.

As fun as it is for me to shoot these emergent situations. An often overlooked part of healthcare is preventing problems in the first place. This could be teaching healthy eating practices in an elementary school.

spoon, enjoy

Eating fruit and yogurt at a nutrition lesson

Or having a trusted relationship with your primary care doctor.

hands, smile, trust, doctor, patient

Personal interaction builds a bond of trust between patient and doctor

In real life, patient areas don’t have that refined TV look that you find on “House“, nor are research labs as stylish as they are on “Bones” and the “CSI” shows.

The first challenge is always to understand what’s going on in the lab and determine how to communicate that unique story. In this case the researcher is doing an advanced DNA screening of an individual patient to calculate the respond to an expensive chemotherapy medication. This is an early stage of personalized medicine.

chemotherapy, drug, cancer, genetic, DNA, screening

DNA screening to match effective treatment for a chemotherapy drug

Having cancer is about more than how your DNA reacts to treatment, it’s also about how you deal with the emotional aspect of the disease.

fishtank, cancer, counselor, volunteer, patient, fish tank,

A cancer survivor volunteers to hear patient's concerns

Prevention, bonding, research and emotional health are important part of care. I love showing it all.

But that still doesn’t beat sending a trauma team racing down the hall.

gurney, trauma, doctor, nurse, patient, IV

Trauma team racing down a hallway

All these photos were taken for Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and were published in their “Report to the Community 2010″.  I’ll update the post when an on-line version is posted.

Mark Harmel

harmelphoto.com

@MarkHarmel

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2 responses so far

2 Responses to “i’ll take an emergency any day”

  1. Derek Rudnakon 30 Mar 2010 at 5:49 pm

    Awesome work, as always!

  2. Blue Fieron 30 Mar 2010 at 9:29 pm

    Great trauma team shot, love the energy and movement.

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