Docudramas
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St.
John’s emergency personnel too often see the devastating results of drinking
and driving.
Staff from St. John’s
Trauma and Burn Center assist local high schools and universities to stage
mock car crashes, or docudramas. The purpose of docudramas is to give
students a glimpse of what happens during an alcohol-related car crash.
The process of setting up
docudramas is a community effort. A team of St. John’s Trauma and Burn
Center nurses use makeup and other supplies to transform student volunteers
into realistic-looking crash victims.
Firefighters, paramedics,
police officers and other emergency personnel respond to the scene as if it
were a real situation. The local fire departments use the Jaws of Life to
extract crash victims from the car. Paramedics treat victims’ mock injuries
and police officers give sobriety tests to the mock drunk drivers and even
put them in handcuffs.
The impact a docudrama has
on students can be the key to saving more lives.
“The scenario was so
believable that people were looking out of their dorm room windows and
others were coming outside because they thought it was real,” says MSU
sophomore and docudrama participant Amber Bond.
Each year approximately 20
high schools and universities in the Ozarks coordinate a docudrama with St.
John’s Trauma Prevention Program. Following the crash scene, the student
audience attends an assembly led by St. John’s Trauma Prevention Education
Coordinator Pam Holt, RN, BSN, which gives the student body an opportunity
to discuss the crash scene and the events surrounding the mock crash.
Holt also presents a
powerful, interactive presentation called “Crash Test Dummies: Up Close and
Personal.” During the presentation, Holt explains the physics of a motor
vehicle crash and describes the injuries that crash victims commonly
sustain. She also discusses various driving behaviors such as inattention
and drinking and driving with the students.
As the only Level 1 Adult
and Pediatric Trauma Center in southwest Missouri, St. John’s is dedicated
to community outreach and prevention by providing these types of educations
programs. According to state regulation, a Level 1 Trauma Center such as St.
John’s must meet and maintain certain criteria and obligations for the
community. Because St. John’s chooses to be a Level I Trauma Center, there
is always a surgeon inside the hospital prepared to respond to a trauma
patient in the emergency department or the intensive care unit. St. John’s
also has a dedicated trauma research program along with the injury
prevention program, which sets them apart form other hospitals in the area.
St. John's is the only
hospital in the Ozarks that provides complete coordination of docudramas,
which includes the makeup used and the presentation following the mock
crash. If you are interested in organizing a docudrama for your school,
organization or business, contact Pam Holt at 417-820-6672.
A First-hand Account
This first-hand
recollection is by Missy Todd, a student at Missouri State University who
participated in a docudrama organized by St. John’s Trauma and Burn Center.
"I remember the warm fluid
running down my face. The first sounds I heard were the blood-curdling
screams of my two friends. I could not understand their cries because I was
concentrating on the distinct sounds of the sirens in the distance. I’m not
sure how long I listened to my friends’ screams before I decided to open my
eyes. Their screams were so loud that I couldn’t focus on the sirens.
"As I tried to open my eyes
to see what the commotion was about, I lost vision in my right eye. What I
saw with my left eye was a scene that will be forever etched in my mind. The
spider-web crack in the windshield was the first thing that came into focus.
That must have been caused by my head, and red fluid on the dash board, I
assumed, was a result of the collision between my head and the glass. John
was supposed to be driving. He was the least drunk out of the three of us.
Where was he now? He’s not in the car! But I could feel Emily’s hand on my
left shoulder. She was in the back seat. I remember being scared. I felt
all alone ...
"Then, suddenly, a white
sheet was put over me. ‘Wait,’ I thought. ‘I’m supposed to live. I’m not
dead! This isn’t what was supposed to happen!’ What I heard next made the
hair rise up on the back of my neck. The sound of crushing metal was next
to the right side of my head. It reminded me of when my father and I used
to crush soda cans before recycling them. But I knew what was happening. It
wasn’t soda cans that were being crushed, it was the car door. Apparently my
door had jammed during the crash and the firefighters had to cut the door
off to get me out . . .
"As paramedics loaded me
onto the stretcher I could still hear the screams. “Where’s Emily? Where’s
John?” I yelled. But my cries went unanswered. As I was put into the back
of the ambulance I saw Emily. She was sitting up with a nervous smile on
her face. “That was intense,” she said with a shaken voice.
"I unhooked the belts
holding me onto the stretcher and sat next to her on her gurney.
“I know,” I said looking
out the ambulance window to the crowd of people now gathered around the car.
“Good thing it wasn’t real.”