ROP

NYU Winthrop unsung heroes providing acute care at finish line of NYC marathon

The Island Now
NYU Winthrop medical volunteers team to provide acute care at finish line of NYC Marathon. (Photo courtesy of NYU Winthrop Hospital)

For racers in the New York City Marathon, the battle doesn’t always end at the finish line. That’s why nearly two dozen physicians, med students, and nurses from NYU Winthrop Hospital volunteered to provide acute care for racers in need of urgent medical care as they crossed the finish line. The volunteers helped man a massive, acute care tent, which held enough cots to provide triage for 1,700+ runners and included an ICU (Intensive Care Unit) for serious medical issues. Where one battle ended—runners finishing the race—the next battle began—to send them home healthy.

“Thousands of runners were collapsing, non-stop,” said NYU Winthrop’s volunteer team leader, Andrew Moawad. “Our triage tent almost resembled a battlefield environment, but fortunately our experienced medical team stabilized the vast majority of runners that we treated.” NYU Winthrop’s team was among dozens of such medical teams, among the many unsung heroes who serve behind the scenes to help make the world’s largest marathon a success.

NYU Winthrop medical volunteers hailed from all over Long Island including Melville, Merrick, Smithtown, and Cutchogue, as well as from points further afield such as Miami and Rockville, Maryland. They tended to issues that included dehydration; hypothermia and hyperthermia (temperatures too low or high), and rhabdomyolysis—a potentially dangerous condition involving a breakdown of muscle tissue into the bloodstream that can lead to kidney damage. Other runners suffered from hyponatremia, their bodies diluted of crucial sodium from drinking too much water along the way, and on the flip side were those under-hydrated with hyponatremia, both conditions presenting risks such as an altered mental state or more serious problems.

“Caring for these bold and ambitious runners was such a rewarding experience for our medical team,” added James Ciancarelli, MD, chief resident at NYU Winthrop Hospital. “The experience has now inspired in us the goal of serving on medical teams in the five major marathons in Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Washington DC.”

Prior to assisting with the New York City Marathon, the medical volunteers were required to attend lengthy medical orientation sessions in New York in order to be credentialed for the marathon.

Submitted by NYU Winthrop Hospital

Share this Article