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Veteran shot with own gun in MR suite

by Thomas Dworetzky, Contributing Reporter | January 06, 2016
MRI Risk Management
If you're running an MR suite, here's something you might add to your patient admission arsenal: check for concealed weapons before letting someone enter.

As more and more people feel it necessary to exercise their second amendment right to carry arms, a new gun risk has just popped up: In Indianapolis a veteran allegedly walked into an MR room packing a .45 pistol and it got sucked against the magnet and went off, according to initial reports.

Fortunately his wound was not life-threatening, but it might have been, according to a report in the Indianopolis Star.
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The incident took place at Richard L. Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center, which has since walked back the initial statement by an unnamed hospital spokesman that an MR machine was involved, stating only that the firing happened "in a procedure room."

Regardless, with more guns than ever being carried, it is possibly time to revisit standard operating procedures surrounding these powerfully magnetic machines. While this latest incident is apparently the first in which someone was shot, it is not the first time a weapon has gone off in proximity to MR.

A 2002 paper that appeared in the American Journal of Roentgenology reported that an off-duty police officer in Rochester brought his weapon with him when he went for MR imaging. He told the technologist he had the Colt pistol with him and was told to bring the gun with him — with the intention that he would be relieved of the weapon in the patient waiting area so that it could be kept safely by staff until after his exam. A misunderstanding led the officer to enter the MR suite itself with the weapon in his hand.

"Once the officer was inside the MR suite, the gun was pulled from his hand as he attempted to place the gun on top of a cabinet 3 ft (0.9 m) away from the magnet bore. The gun was immediately pulled into the bore, where it struck the left side and spontaneously discharged a round into the wall of the room at the rear of the magnet. Fortunately, no one was injured. Although the gun struck the magnet bore, only minimal cosmetic damage occurred to the magnet itself. The MR unit had full functional capability immediately after the gun discharged. The weapon's thumb safety was reportedly engaged when the gun discharged," according to the case report.

The magnet had to be powered down to remove the gun from its location stuck to an inner wall of the imaging bore.
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Brian Tunell

Veteran donates pistol to MRI Bore

January 07, 2016 04:38

My first reaction was that this was ignorance on the patient's part, and poor prep on the Technologist's part.
Then I had to wonder, WHY was this patient carrying a pistol with a round chambered? And, every medical facility I've been in is a "gun free zone," which begs the question, WHY was the patient carrying in a medical facility to begin with?

Just sayin'

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