Re: Lethality of the 22LR- Results!
Another anecdotal story, which by the way means: it happened this way this time, but that doesn't mean it will happen that way again. which is what most of these stories are. Anecdotal, that is.
I was training as an EMT at Washoe Medical ER in Reno (now Renown), back in the early 70's. A young nurse hung up the phone, sort of chuckling and said "another prank call, said someone was in the lobby who had shot himself."
The phone rang again immediately, and after listening this time she hung up the phone looking a little more serious. "Maybe I better go up, and check this out." she says, and tells me to bring a wheel chair (!).
We trot up to the next floor which was the actual lobby to the hospital, and sure enough, there is a young guy skinny, sort of sad looking, sitting on a chair, with a small trickle of blood coming from his right ear. I tell him to sit in the wheel chair, and he does so under his own power, and we scoot for the ER.
On the way, he tells me his girl left him, and he hates his life, and that he took his 22 and shot himself in the ear. He then says he woke up a few minutes later, and was still alive, so he shot himself again, both times with a Ruger Bearcat .22. In the same ear. Then drove himself to the hospital, and walked in. And waited 15 minutes for us to come pick him up.
Cross table X rays done in ER showed a solid bullet against he opposite carotid artery, in his neck, and a split bullet , with one half against the spinal cord in his neck, about C3, and one against the carotid on the same side. By now, his neck and the side of his face was swelling, and he was a bit drowsy, so they took him to surgery, and that was the last I saw of him. Never learned the outcome.