why, the answer is the door alarm went off indicating the door was a jar so the officer was dispatched off. i don t have it. and your second question? is it possible he was shot? the question is was he security officer shot before ts suspect was shooting into the crowd? the answer is yell we believe he was shot, i m sorry we believe he was shooting into the crowd and then the security officer was shot after that. i m taking twoel more. do we know how many people were actually shot versus the trample injuries? the question is how many people were shot versus other trampling injuries? as you well know the number dead and injured and we still have critically injured people in the hospitals, you notice i m not giving you a number, because that number continues to change every day. people are being discharged from the hospital.
. so you have a two-part question. what time did the security officer arrive to check the door and why the answer is that the door alarm went off indicating the door was ajar. your second question. is it possible that the question is was the security officer shot before the suspect was shooting into the crowd. yes, we believe i m sorry. we believe he was shooting into the crowd and then the security officer was shot. i m taking two more. go ahead. do we know how many people were actually shot versus the trampling injuries or anything else? that s a question that the question is, how many people were shot versus other trampling injuries. as you know, the number that we
center where over 200 of the victims were taken. dr. fisher, have you ever done training for the arrival of 200 emergencies? we do mass casualty disaster training several times a year. it s required of all trauma centers to be prepared for something like this. but it s never the same in real life versus the drill. and so this is the biggest event you d ever been a participant in terms yes. i think this is the biggest event that any civilian hospital has seen. what percentage of the injuries gunshot injuries? at our hospital approximately two-thirds were gunshot wounds. and others could be from falling while rung. right, trampling injuries. and so how did you make the decisions about who to treat in what way? well we had our system set up so a lot of our e.r. physicians triage the patients, which ones were the least ill to the most critically ill, who needed surgery right away.
christopher fisher. he is the medical director of trauma services at sun medical center where over 200 of the victims were taken. dr. fisher, have you ever done training for the arrival of 200 emergencies? we do mass casualty disaster training several times a year. it s required of all trauma centers to be prepared for something like this. but it s never the same in real life versus the drill. and so this is the biggest event you d ever been a participant in terms yes. i think this is the biggest event that any civilian hospital has seen. what percentage of the injuries gunshot injuries? at our hospital approximately two-thirds were gunshot wounds. and others could be from falling while rung. right, trampling injuries. and so how did you make the decisions about who to treat in what way? well we had our system set up so a lot of our e.r. physicians triage the patients, which ones
reporter: exactly, john. what we know is that now we have 58 fatalities. we have the only level one trauma center in the state of nevada here. universal medical center. this is where they would treat the most horrific injuries. they had 30 patients treated in the trauma center and taken to the operating room and 12 are in critical condition. there is another hospital that has three campuses here. the st. rose dignity health has 55 patients and four remain in critical and some have been discharged, but the other wounds are trampling injuries and cuts from climbing over fences as people tried to escape. and we also heard from sunrise hospital which is the closest to the strip. they received 180 patients and of those, 14 have passed away. they performed some 30