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Published: August 12, 2008
TAMPA - Officials at Tampa General Hospital are reviewing safety protocols and procedures after two psychiatric patients committed suicide in July, a hospital spokesman said.
"While we are confident in our safety protocols and procedures, we are reviewing them to determine if there are other steps or policies that can be implemented that go beyond the existing standards to better detect, prevent or deter these types of events in the future," spokesman John Dunn said in a statement released Monday.
According to a Tampa police report, a 44-year-old Tampa woman hanged herself July 21 with a bedsheet on a closet door between 15-minute security checks. Hospital staff performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and the woman was listed in critical condition before she died later that day. She had been admitted to the hospital's 22-bed psychiatric ward several times, the police report states.
At 4:55 p.m. July 23, a 28-year-old Tampa man hanged himself in the same manner. An employee found the man, who was revived but later died. The man had been admitted June 21 into the psychiatric ward under the state's Baker Act, according to a police report.
Officials have conducted a formal review of the deaths, which were not related. The suicides were reported to the state's Agency for Health Care Administration and federal health care agencies, Dunn said.
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