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Suburban Hospital

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Sex Offense at Spa, Violence at Whitman, B-CC: Bethesda February Crime

A roundup of our top crime headlines from the month of February.

A sex offense at a Bethesda spa, an emergency room patient who threatened to shoot a police officer at Suburban Hospital, and a Walt Whitman High School student charged after allegedly robbing another student in a school bathroom. These are a few of the top Bethesda crime headlines from the month of February. Get caught up on this month's crime news:

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Police: Suburban Emergency Room Patient Threatened to Shoot Officer

Police allege a 32-year-old Kensington man being treated at Suburban told an officer, “Come closer so I can take your gun and shoot you. I will kill you.”

Police say an emergency room patient at Suburban Hospital has been charged with threatening to shoot a police officer and poked him in the chest. Montgomery County Police spokeswoman Officer Rebecca Innocenti said a police officer was at the Bethesda hospital on a call around 9 p.m. Feb. 6 when an emergency room patient began yelling and threatening the officer. The patient, a 32-year-old Kensington man, allegedly told the officer, “Come closer so I can take your gun and shoot you. I will kill you.” The man then poked the officer in the chest, Innocenti said.  Police restrained the man, but he was not arrested because he was being treated at the hospital, Innocenti said. The man was charged with second-degree assault and surly conduct. A …

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Police: Suburban Emergency Room Patient Threatened To Shoot Officer

Police allege a 32-year-old Kensington man being treated at Suburban told an officer, “Come closer so I can take your gun and shoot you. I will kill you.”

Police say an emergency room patient at Suburban Hospital has been charged with threatening to shoot a police officer and poked him in the chest. Montgomery County Police spokeswoman Officer Rebecca Innocenti said a police officer was at the Bethesda hospital on a call around 9 p.m. Feb. 6 when an emergency room patient began yelling and threatening the officer. The patient, a 32-year-old Kensington man, allegedly told the officer, “Come closer so I can take your gun and shoot you. I will kill you.” The man then poked the officer in the chest, Innocenti said.  Police restrained the man, but he was not arrested because he was being treated at the hospital, Innocenti said. The man was charged with second-degree assault and surly conduct. A …

RuthieH

3:09 pm on Monday, February 18, 2013

Not Smart, not smart at all.   more ›

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

County Hospitals See Uptick In Flu Patients

Patients with flu-like symptoms are crowding emergency rooms as officials gear up for what could be a bad flu season.

Montgomery County hospitals are seeing an increase in patients with flu-like symptoms as the number of influenza cases across the state and the country rises and health officials gear up for a flu season that could be the one of the worst in a decade. The flu is spreading earlier and faster than usual in the Washington, DC, region this year, The Washington Post reported, and Maryland is experiencing widespread cases. In Maryland so far this season, 2,362 have tested positive for the flu, according to The Baltimore Sun. But since many patients are treated for flu-like symptoms without being tested, the number is likely much higher, said Mary Anderson, a spokeswoman for the Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services. The …

Patricia J. Kelly

11:18 am on Wednesday, January 9, 2013

When someone is sick they should try to avoid situations that infect others, alot of this is common sense. Cover your mouth when you cough or sneeze, wear a mask, wash hands. blah blah... How many times have you been in a checkout line and some inconsiderate person sneezes and blows snot all over the everyone or your food service worker coughs as they are bringing your plate to you, and there are…   more ›

Monday, December 17, 2012

Suburban Hospital Names New President

Gene E. Green will take the helm of the Bethesda hospital after nearly a decade at Johns Hopkins Community Physicians.

Bethesda’s Suburban Hospital has named Gene E. Green as the facility’s new president. He will succeed Brian Gragnolati as president of the hospital, which is a member of Johns Hopkins medicine. Green is a medical doctor and the current chief medical officer for Johns Hopkins Community Physicians, a 400-provider group practice with 37 sites throughout the Maryland and Washington, DC, regions. Suburban officials touted Green’s work at Johns Hopkins Community Physicians, where they say he improved operating performance and increased patient, employee and physician satisfaction. Green held numerous clinical and leadership positions at JHCP since he joined the group practice in 2003, according to a hospital news release. Green worked as a …

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Emergency Department Re-Opens Following Freon Leak At Suburban

The emergency department was briefly closed to incoming patients Tuesday afternoon.

Update, 5:45 p.m.: The Emergency Department has re-opened and all operations are back to normal, according to hospital spokeswoman Ronna Borenstein-Levy. Patient care wasn't impacted during the leak, Borenstein-Levy said. Original Story: A small freon leak caused several offices to be evacuated at Suburban Hospital Tuesday afternoon, Montgomery County Fire and Rescue reported via Twitter. There were no injuries and no patients were evacuated from the hospital, tweeted Assistant Chief Scott Graham, a Fire and Rescue spokesman. The leak originated from a cooling system in the IT Department in the basement of the hospital, used to keep the IT equipment cool, according to a statement posted on Suburban Hospital's website. "There is no impact …

Friday, September 28, 2012

Suburban Hospital named “Healthiest Workplace”

Washington Business Journal says Suburban encourages a healthy lifestyle for employees.

Suburban Hospital has been named Washington’s “Healthiest Workplace” by Washington Business Journal for its efforts to improve and encourage healthy eating, fitness habits, and an overall lively lifestyle.  Suburban, which is a member of Johns Hopkins Medicine, is known for its cutting-edge stroke program and trauma center, according to its website.  Now, the not-for-profit, community-based hospital will also be known as the healthiest workplace in the Washington, DC area with healthy food options, a smoke-free campus and seminars on healthy living.  “It’s my belief that if you have healthy staff that feel good about themselves and feel good about their employer, then they’re going to give better care to our patients when they’re here,” …

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Record Number of Emergency Patients Reported at Suburban

Many treated in the hospital's emergency department over the weekend suffered from heat exhaustion.

Suburban Hospital treated a record number of patients in its emergency department following Friday’s violent derecho storm, which left thousands without power and sweltering in the summer heat. The Old Georgetown Road facility has treated about 150 patients each day since the storm, with Saturday and Sunday marking the greatest number of patients seen in a 48-hour period in the hospital’s emergency department, according to a hospital statement. By Tuesday, the flow of patients was slowing. Over the weekend, physicians treated a “significant” number of patients suffering from heat exhaustion, many of whom were elderly, said Ronna Borenstein-Levy, a hospital spokeswoman. “In extreme heat, when the AC goes out, it’s people who already have …

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Record Number of Emergency Patients Reported At Suburban

Many treated in the hospital's emergency department over the weekend suffered from heat exhaustion.

Suburban Hospital treated a record number of patients in its emergency department following Friday’s violent derecho storms, which left thousands without power and sweltering in the summer heat. The Old Georgetown Road facility has treated about 150 patients each day since the storm, with Saturday and Sunday marking the greatest number of patients seen in a 48-hour period in the hospital’s emergency department, according to a hospital statement. By Tuesday, the flow of patients was slowing. Over the weekend, physicians treated a “significant” number of patients suffering from heat exhaustion, many of whom were elderly, said Ronna Borenstein-Levy, a hospital spokeswoman. “In extreme heat, when the AC goes out, it’s people who already have …

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Suburban Hospital Murder Sentencing Postponed

Keith D. Little of Lanham, convicted of killing his boss at Suburban Hospital, will be sentenced Monday.

A sentencing scheduled to go forward Wednesday for Keith D. Little, convicted of killing his supervisor at Suburban Hospital, has been postponed. Little, of Lanham, was found guilty of first-degree murder in December for the Jan. 1, 2011 murder of Roosevelt Brockington, Jr. Brockington was found stabbed more than 70 times in the hospital's basement boiler room, where both men worked. The sentencing is now scheduled for Monday, Feb. 13, at 8:30 a.m.

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