大混乱 and a 追跡する of 血 as nursing 補佐官 helped Las Vegas 大虐殺 犠牲者s

By Sharon Bernstein

LAS VEGAS, Oct 6 (Reuters) - Images of 大虐殺 at a country music festival 揺さぶるd Jacqueline Rodriguez as she checked her social マスコミ 料金d on Sunday night, 権利 after はうing into bed に引き続いて a 12-hour 転換 as a nursing 補佐官 at Sunrise Hospital and 医療の 中心 in Las Vegas.

Rodriguez climbed 支援する into her uniform, jumped into her gray Mazda 3 and raced 支援する to the hospital at a 速度(を上げる) that made the 旅行 a lot shorter than its usual 15 minutes.

"There were people everywhere and a 追跡する of 血 from the 救急車 bay all the way in," Rodriguez, 31, said Friday. "There were people crying, 叫び声をあげるing in every bay in the 緊急 room."

Grueling hours turned into days as she and her 同僚s 緊急発進するd to を取り引きする the 影響 of the deadliest 集まり 狙撃 in modern U.S. history, after Stephen Paddock, 64, broke the windows of his Mandalay Bay hotel room and rained 弾丸s on the concert (人が)群がる.

Rodriguez ran from 患者 to 患者, 急ぐing chest tubes to doctors who needed to drain fluid from 患者s' 肺s and IV 器具/備品 for nurses to give 患者s fluid, 薬/医学s and 苦痛 救済.

She helped 解除する 患者s の上に gurneys and move them to 治療 areas.

Doctors yelled, "Make room! Make Room!," as more 患者s arrived, and more.

Paddock killed 58 people that night, and 負傷させるd nearly 500 more before turning one of his guns on himself.

Sunrise Hospital 扱う/治療するd 200 of the 犠牲者s. Others received care at (v)提携させる(n)支部,加入者d community hospitals and Las Vegas' University 医療の 中心.

Rodriguez worked until 4 a.m., went home to にわか雨 and (機の)カム 支援する for another 12-hour 転換 at 7 a.m.

She can't remember too many 詳細(に述べる)s - mostly the 血 and the (人が)群がるs and the adrenalin pumping through her 団体/死体.

"It was, 'Go! Go! Go!" she said. "Save lives! That was the only thing that 事柄d to us that night."

It wasn't until Wednesday, her first day off, tha t feelings started 泡ing up.

"Wednesday I wake up and my house was 完全に silent and that´s when it really 夜明けd on me," Rodriguez said. She felt hopelessness, sadness, 怒り/怒る.

And she became more 決定するd than ever to one day become a 登録(する)d nurse.

"There´s no greater feeling than to know you are saving people´s lives on a daily basis," she said. "It tells you there is still good in this world." (報告(する)/憶測ing by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by David Gregorio)

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