NEW
 YORK (Reuters) - New York City's Bellevue Hospital Center, which has 
been operating on backup generators since massive storm Sandy pummeled 
the city, is being evacuated, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said on Wednesday.
              About 500 patients at the city hospital near the East River in Manhattan are affected. Bellevue has one of the busiest emergency departments in the city.
              Several area hospitals, including The Mount Sinai Hospital and St. Luke's Roosevelt Hospital Center, have agreed to take some of Bellevue's patients.
"We learned this morning that Bellevue will now have to
 evacuate because of damage that it has sustained," Bloomberg told a 
news conference."They didn't think the damage was that bad, and they had a generator going. But the bottom line is when they got into the basement they realized there was more damage," Bloomberg said.
              Outside Bellevue, the oldest of New York's public hospitals, a long line of ambulances waited to ferry patients to other medical centers.
A handful of New York hospitals had already been 
evacuated due to the storm that caused record flooding in parts of the 
city.New York University's Langone Medical Center near the East River was forced to evacuate all 215 of its patients, including critically ill infants, when its backup generator failed after some eight feet of water flooded its basement.
              The Manhattan Veterans Affairs Hospital
 and the New York Downtown Hospital, both in low-lying areas of lower 
Manhattan, evacuated patients before the storm hit, and Brooklyn's Coney
 Island Hospital near the Atlantic Ocean beaches was later evacuated.
              A spokeswoman for New York Presbyterian Hospital
 said it was accepting transfers from Bellevue, but she was unsure of 
the number. It had already taken patients from three other medical 
centers, including NYU Langone.
              Bellevue, known for
 its psychiatric care facilities, has many other therapeutic 
departments. The hospital has long been an important resource for the 
city's poor and uninsured.
              Jarron Franklyn, 
28, who works in Bellevue's rehabilitation department, said: "The power 
is down, and we have flooding in the basement." He said a back-up 
generator was still running.
              A New York Police Department spokesman said National Guard members were assisting with the Bellevue evacuation.
              Dennis Jiosne, 34, a
 patient from Point Pleasant, New Jersey, was evacuated by stairs from 
the hospital's 16th floor. He said National Guardsmen in the stair well 
were passing people food and water.
              Jiosne, who was 
being treated for a septic ulcer, said the power went out two days ago 
and there was no running water in his room. He appeared to be taking it 
in stride.
              "In my unit it 
really wasn't bad, aside from the plumbing and the food," he said. "I'm a
 pretty resilient guy. I was content in my room. The lack of television 
was an inconvenience."
              (Reporting by Paul 
Thomasch, Bill Berkrot, Michael Erman; and Anna Sussman; Editing by 
Jackie Frank and David Gregorio)







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