HARTFORD, CT – In a stunning combination of social work finesse and aeronautical engineering, one local hospital’s ED has patented the first “Eject” button in medical history.

This progressive move spawned from a previously-explored Quality Improvement Initiative whereby challenging patients were identified with wristbands. In spite of this stigmatizing label, these patients have demonstrated the impervious resilience of a fighter pilot by returning to the ED for pain meds and head CT scans.
Dr. Kristina “Maverick” Patterson has applauded this technology since day 1. “We bring so many patients in by air, honestly I’m surprised we haven’t used this as an exit strategy,” she tells reporters at GomerBlog. The exit strategy, of course, being a swift aerial launch of repugnant persons from ED beds 1 to 8.
When an “ejectable patient” is first identified, they are asked to switch into a more comfortable gown. These more comfortable gowns have a built in parachute in the back that looks like a neck pillow attachment. After changing into the gown, any provider can hit the eject button which starts a sequence of events leading to the ceiling opening followed by a controlled explosion under the gurney that launches the patient 200+ yards up into the sky. The parachute should open and carry them far away from the hospital.
Hospital representatives say the technology has dramatically reduced ED provider time, thereby increasing the efficiency of “real” healthcare delivery. Despite the impressively high overhead, overall ED expenditures in the last quarter have dropped by a remarkable 45%. ED Chief Tom Skerritt has announced his next step to apply for NIH funding of an additional 28 “Aerobeds.”
No adverse events have been reported to date as parachutes are attached to patients before the ejection button is hit. Interns are even sent out into the field to retrieve the Aerobeds and parachutes afterwards.
wish there was one for Stepdown & ICU transfers…& 1 for floor discharges @boredERdoc
interesting way to cut ED waiting times
Too funny.
Every ER should have one of these
Every ER should have one of these
Lmao!
Adam Dauer Erick Muller Redmond Stephan Laura Santana Holly Goodin Osmond Eslava now we just need one for the prehospital setting
Amanda Preston Johnston this is for you. Wish it were true. Happy Easter.
“The parachute should open” hee hee
Omg that would be comical
Hahahahaha Tamara ‘MaRa’ Weathers Dan Elle Wilkinson Jenna Lauren
We once had a faulty stretcher in ER that would not lie flat- kept popping everyone back into high fowlers position. We called it our Gomer ejector stretcher. Priceless article. Thanks for the memories!
Morgan Hekele
Joy Fyrne forget the bell, Let’s try this on our floor !!
We got an eject button, it’s called Security
Tracy Mouser this is perfect!
Paul DeJohn
Lol!
You don’t gotta go home but you can’t stay here!
Sarah Harris