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Some attendees of frigid Chiefs game forced into amputations following severe frostbite, Kansas City hospital says

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Some attendees of frigid Chiefs game forced into amputations following severe frostbite, Kansas City hospital says

 

At least “some” football fans, who attended January’s bitterly cold Kansas City Chiefs playoff game, suffered extreme frostbite and eventually needed amputations, a hospital official said Thursday.

 

Some attendees of frigid Chiefs game forced into amputations following severe frostbite, Kansas City hospital says

The back-to-back champion Chiefs launched their 2023-24 postseason run with a 26-7 victory over the Miami Dolphins on Jan. 13 in a game that might be remembered as much for temperature readings than the final score.

The mercury plummeted to minus 3 with a wind chill of minus 25 at halftime of the contest played at Arrowhead Stadium.

The Grossman Burn Center in Kansas City treated 30 patients who suffered frostbite in January.

“To date, 12 patients have undergone amputation surgeries. Some of which attended the Chiefs game,” said Christine Hamele, associate vice president of HCA Midwest Health which operates seven hospitals, including the Research Medical Center and its Grossman Burn Center.

“Our specialized physicians and expert care team continue to treat and monitor patients’ healing to address long-term needs, and we expect more surgical procedures over the next two to four weeks as their injuries evolve.”

Hamele cautioned against drawing any direct lines between amputations and that frigid Chiefs game because those frostbitten limbs and digits could have resulted from other exposures.

“Some patients came in post-Chief game, assuming it would heal,” Hamele said. “When they arrived in the outpatient, they don’t always reference the Chiefs game. For example, one gentleman was at the Chiefs game, but is also a meter reader.”

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