BY JUDY LIN-EFTEKHAR
UCLA Today Staff
Arthur Sorrell had considered going out to
Paddy’s Discotheque, a popular pub, on his first Saturday
night in Bali. A senior resident in emergency medicine at the
David Geffen School of Medicine, the doctor had arrived two
days earlier to teach local physicians at the Bali International
Medical Center, a satellite site of the UCLA Center for International
Emergency Medicine. Instead of going out, he decided to turn
in early.
At 11:15 p.m. on Oct. 12, however, he was awakened
by a phone call from the clinic administrator: An explosion
not far from the clinic had left hundreds dead and wounded.
They needed to get to work immediately.
Only later would they learn that the explosion
had been a pair of bombs — one of them a large car bomb
— that had destroyed Paddy’s and the popular Sari
Club across the street. The bombings were believed to be the
work of Al Qaeda terrorists and their extremist allies.
“When we got to the clinic, there were hundreds of people
outside — victims, onlookers and ambulances lining up,”
Sorrell said of a scene unlike anything he’d ever witnessed.
“I’ve seen many injuries, even some as bad. But
I’ve never seen so many critically injured people at the
same time.”
Doctors and nurses at the seven-bed clinic
treated about 60 victims that night, most of them suffering
from severe burns and shrapnel wounds. On Sunday, a call came
for doctors and nurses across the island to report to Bali’s
Sanglah Hospital. Sorrell ended up being the sole doctor in
the intensive care unit that afternoon.
In ensuing days, Sorrell also helped prepare
patients for airlifts to medical treatment elsewhere by the
Australian government. Even that, he said, “was a chaotic
scene. We were literally searching wards for people, trying
to find who’s who, had they been treated or not. It was
a nightmare.”
Two weeks after the tragedy, Sorrell reluctantly
returned to Los Angeles.
“I think it was a good thing that I was there. It was
something that I could do, and that was good for me,”
he said. “I just wish I could have done more.”