Meet Rock Med: the Guardian Angels of Concertgoers
by Caroline Chen, blogs.sfweekly.com
July 13th 2011 6:00 AM
They might be the greatest concert buffs of all time. This
year, they plan to attend 700 concerts. Last month alone, they saw an
astounding 60-odd shows, including Iron & Wine, Britney Spears, U2, Panic! At
the Disco, and the Yellow Magic Orchestra. And they're intent on continuing at
the same two or more concerts a night pace for the rest of the summer.
But they're more than just a bunch of music nerds. They've been called
life-savers and rightly so. They're the volunteers of Rock Medicine, a division
of Haight Ashbury Free Clinics dedicated to providing free health care at
concerts year-round.
Rock Med was started in 1973 when rock promoter Bill Graham came to Haight
Ashbury Free Clinics asking for help. "He was very unhappy with the way his
patrons were being treated," Rock Med Director Wes Fifield tells S.F. Weekly.
"Ticket buyers were considered dirty hippies, and he wondered if they could be
treated on-site so they wouldn't impact the community." And so Rock Med was
born, staffing shows from the likes of Led Zeppelin and the Grateful Dead.
Since then, Rock Med has become the go-to concert health provider in the Bay
Area, with over 1,000 volunteers. The group is particularly attractive to
recent medical graduates who need work experience before they can get a job.
Fifield laughs when asked what sort of experience Rock Med provides. "Working
Rock Med is the closest you're going to get to battlefield experience," he
says. "You get to see the whole gamut."
On an average night, Rock Med staff might see 10-20 patients, but that number
jumps into the hundreds at weekend outdoor shows. "At any given concert,
alcohol's the number one issue -- always has been, always will be," says
Fifield. "If you're talking about country-western concerts, then Jack Daniels
is king." Nine-year Rock Med veteran Darrin Brown adds, "At Phish and the Dead
concerts, you get more psychedelic drugs. We just talk to them and try to get
down to their level and let them know that they're safe."
Alcohol is just the start. Rock Med handles almost everything, including
cardiac problems and head lacerations. "I can't imagine you'll tell me anything
I've not seen in the time I've been here," says Fifield. "The only thing I
haven't seen done is births. Many mothers in labor approach us, but we've
always been able to get them in an ambulance."
Rock Med operates under the motto of Haight Ashbury Free Clinics: "Health Care
is a Right, Not a Privilege." Their tents are comparable with any ER, and
Fifield says that they are prepared to take care of everything on site other
than X-rays and bone casting. "Why should you pay $1,500 for an ambulance ride
when we can take care of you on-site?" he says.
With such extensive care on offer, more than just concertgoers seek out Rock
Med for help. Fifield says that the homeless population at Golden Gate Park is
always eager for them to return, as many see Rock Med as their primary health
care provider.
Despite the thousands of people and enormous range of ailments they treat each
month, in its 38 years of operation, Rock Med has, miraculously, never seen a
lawsuit. "We're very particular about paperwork, and if someone goes to an
E.R., we will fill out a patient care report like you'll find in any hospital,"
says Fifield.
As the summer concert season goes into full swing, Fifield advises
concertgoers to stay hydrated and "eat, please!" He says many people forget to
eat because they're too excited for the concert, then after a couple of drinks
and hours standing in a packed venues, they end up in the Rock Med tent. "A
little preventative maintenance goes a long way," he says.
So if you're going to a concert this summer (as we hope you are!), keep
Fifield's advice in mind to ensure you have a good time. But it's also good to
know that the Rock Medicine angels will be waiting in the wings, just in case.
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Original Page:
http://blogs.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2011/07/meet_rock_med_guardian_angels.php
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