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Advertising Blurbs
Amazon:
Life or death in the ER--it's up to you! In Emergency Room: Disaster Strikes, you're the ER doctor on duty and it's never been crazier. Your city has just been devastated by the worst earthquake in history, causing the freeway to buckle during rush hour. And if that's not bad enough, a massive winter storm has pounded the shore for days, with mudslides and flooding. You're needed desperately, doctor. Get to the scene of the disaster and start helping patients now!
Features:
- Choose from 100 exciting cases: broken bones, heart attacks, drowning, and more
- Complete a head-to-toe exam of your patient
- Take x-ray, CT, and ultrasound tests, but remember, the hospital doesn't like unnecessary procedures
- Manipulate treatment tools such as sutures, splints, forceps, IV, and more
- Accurate medical databases provide clues to the correct diagnosis
Contributed by Jeanne (59133) on Nov 11, 2005.
CD-Access:
Real Life, Heart Pumping Drama
You're the ER doctor on duty and it's never been crazier. Your city has just been devastated by the worst earthquake in its history, with massive destruction and flooding. Get to the scene of the disaster and start helping patients now.
Emergency Room - Disaster Strikes is part of the award winning and best selling Emergency Room series, with more than 350,000 copies sold.
So Intense, You'll Forget It's a Game
- Successfully diagnose and treat patients and be promoted to Chief of Staff
- Accurate medical procedures, designed by an ER doctor
- More than 250 entertaining, all new video segments
Earthquake - Whole apartment buildings have collapsed. The wounded are everywhere. There's not a minute to lose.
Medical Tools - Examine and treat your patient, with state of the art medical tools such as forceps, bandages, splints, IV, and sutures.
Disaster Scene - Be the first on the scene to help victims with heart attacks, broken bones, internal injuries, burns, head trauma, drowning, lacerations, and much more.
Treatment Room - You've diagnosed his problem. Now all you have to do is patch him up. (But Doc, it's my toe that hurts.")
Contributed by Jeanne (59133) on Nov 11, 2005.
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