Sawbones Central
ACC2214, or Sawbones Central as it is more commonly known among the populace of DFW/Arlington, has been in operation for the past ten years. The heavily-armored, forbidding structure was once a critical care unit that was overrun by gangers, criminals and habitual drug-users when Arlington was abandoned by Lone Star and pronounced a Z-zone in the mid ’30s as Houston and Aztlan refugees flooded the area. As of 2063, the broken-down hospital was on the verge of toppling, with the city council on the verge of condemning the building, when DocWagon stepped in.
First, corporate leaders brought in HTR security personnel to clear out the building of the criminal squatters inhabiting it. Then the construction teams were brought in to tear down and rebuild the clinic after contracts were signed and permits were obtained. After a year, the place wasn’t even recognizable as the former low-cost clinic it had been for decades before Aztlan’s invasion of Texas.
DocWagon’s PR department was determined to continue the former clinic’s tradition of low-cost medical care to residents of Arlington. ACC2214 was built with servicing the community of Arlington in mind primarily, and the security of the installation in the face of growing gang warfare and violence secondarily. The company established a tradition, still held to this day, of rotating a steady schedule of its third- and fourth-year medical school students and first-year interns to ACC214. This tradition earned the clinic the unflattering moniker of “Sawbones Central”.
Five years into its operation, ACC2214 was floundering in its attempts to keep its doors open. The costs of employing security from Desert Storm to protect the installation from the constant threat of gang and criminal activity, and the nearly-free medical care provided to thousands of SINless residents who could not afford many of their treatments, were plunging operational costs past the red line. But all that changed when Javier DeSoto, the site director at the time, acquired a grant from the board of directors of Los Colinas Medical Center and several wealthy and charitable independent DFW citizens to sponsor an HTR team at the struggling Acute Care Clinic to support the HTR teams of DocWagon’s headquarters in the sprawl.
With this grant, DeSoto cleared out the sub-level below the main floor of the clinic to create an HTR team headquarters and emergency care center. In addition to the SRTs’ and CRT’s very small fleet of response vehicles, DeSoto also managed to acquire an Ares CityMaster and an Osprey II to serve as HTR vehicles. He also assembled the finest, if perhaps underrated, medical personnel he could find to fill the HTR slots. Slowly over the course of the next five years with an operational HTR team, ACC2214 found its finances stabilizing.

DocWagon Acute Care Clinic 2214
2100 East Randoll Mill Rd.
Arlington, TX 76012
LTG: acc214/docwagon/dfw
CC: 029724012255
ACC2214 Staff
- Nancy Delgado-Cortez, Site Director
- Attending Surgeon
- Attending Physician
- Chief Resident of Surgery
- Dr. Johnathan Carpenter, Chief Resident of Medicine
- Surgical Residents (4)
- Medical Residents (4)
- Surgical Interns (12)
- Medical Interns (16)
- Physicians’ Assistants (14)
- Nurse Practitioners (4)
- Charge Nurses (4)
- RNs (20)
- LPNs (40)
- Social Workers (4)
- Physical Therapists (5)
- Lab Rats (24)
- Radiologists (12)
- Pharmacists (8)
- Pharmacy Techs (16)
SRTs
- 8 teams of 4 paramedics
CRTs
- One team of 8 Crisis Response specialists
HTR Team
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- Lila Kaur
CORPORATE CULTURE
STANDARD ISSUE HTR GEAR

