Code Orange: inside a Toronto hospital’s preparation for the next catastrophe
TORONTO — The warning signalling a mass casualty situation blares out from the overhead speakers in the emergency department at St. Michael’s Hospital minutes before the first patient shuffles in with painted-on scrapes and bruises talking about an explosion.
Staff at the downtown Toronto facility hear the declaration of a “code orange” and whir into action — they know it’s a simulation designed to test the hospital’s response to catastrophe but their reaction to the situation is real.
On this recent weekday morning, at 9:49 a.m., they learn a “bomb” has exploded at Union Station, a key transit hub. The first casualty — a volunteer actor — appears five minutes later.
Carolyn Snider, chief of the emergency department, stands at triage near the department’s front doors. It’s the same spot she stood when the hospital declared a real code orange after a shooting at the Toronto Raptors championship parade in June that left four with bullet wounds and others with injuries from a resulting stampede.