Post by Deleted on Aug 22, 2014 5:40:04 GMT
EICHEN HOUSE
PATIENT INFORMATION
PATIENT INFORMATION
PATIENT #
NAME [LAST, FIRST (M)]
AGE [IN NUMBERS]
GENDER
HEIGHT [USE PB'S]
PLAYBY NAME
0016
NAME [LAST, FIRST (M)]
THOMSPON, NANCY
AGE [IN NUMBERS]
18
GENDER
FEMALE
HEIGHT [USE PB'S]
5’3”
PLAYBY NAME
(YOUNG) HEATHER LANGENKAMP
PATIENT HISTORY
Patient: Thompson, Nancy
Relatives: Donald Thompson (Father); Marge Thompson (Mother) – DECEASED
Details of Transfer;
From: Springwood hospital, psychiatric unit
To: Eichen House
Reason for Transfer: Inadequate facilities for proper treatment of patient, refusal to cooperate with treatment by patient
Other Notes: Relevant details regarding the patient have been included below. The information is based on newspaper articles, police transcripts, eyewitness reports and the patient’s own journal, as well as relevant notes from doctors and staff at the hospital. A more detailed report of the patient’s history and current condition has been mailed to the new facility, Eichen "Echo" House, for the use of the staff there.
The patient was first admitted after the deaths of her school-mates and friends, Tina Gray and Rod Lane, just before the deaths of the patient's boyfriend, Glen Lantz, and mother, Marge Thompson. All, with the exception of the patient's mother, had complained of nightmares prior to their deaths or, in the case of the patient, admittance to the psychiatric unit at Springwood hospital. For reasons as of yet unclear, whether by coincidence or some form of shared delusion, the teenagers all reported having nightmares about the same man, described as having "gloves with knives as claws" and "wearing a green and red stripped sweater with a brown hat" who chased them in their dreams. The patient told eyewitnesses and staff that things that happened in the dreams came true. In spite of the unusual timing of the deaths, all had plausible explanations, unrelated to the supernatural; Ms Gray was believed to have been murdered by her on-again off-again boyfriend, Mr Lane. Mr Lane was later arrested on suspicion of her murder while attempting to flee from the police, wearing clothes soaked with Ms Gray's blood. In spite of the evidence against him, Mr Lane insisted on his innocence in his girlfriend's murder, as did the patient. On the night of Mr Lane's arrest, the patient, expressing concern for Mr Lane, insisted on having the police lieutenant Donald Thompson, also the patient's father, check on Mr Lane, who was discovered hanging in his cell. The coroner's report stated Mr Lane's official cause of death as suicide, although the patient vocalized her belief that Mr Lane's death was the result of foul play. The patient's mother, Mrs Thompson, now deceased, brought the patient in for evaluation following Mr Lane's funeral.
While sleeping under observation, the patient, upon entering deep sleep, gave off unusual readings through the equipment being used to monitor brainwaves, and appeared to have some sort of fit, struggling and thrashing, resulting in several slashes being opened on her wrist. Upon awakening, the patient was reported to have been holding a hat, origins unknown (the staff observing the proceedings insist that they are unaware of how the patient managed to get hold of it, having checked her possessions before commencing observation). The patient insisted that she had pulled the hat out of her dreams, and that her injuries were the result of being attacked in her dreams. A streak of the patient's hair was also observed to have changed colour to white, although the cause of this sudden change are as of yet undetermined. Against all advice from the staff, Mrs Thompson returned home with the patient after the wounds had been dressed and treated.
Staff have recently become aware of Mrs Marge Thompson's alcoholism and controlling nature, and the mother's confinement of the patient to the house following their return home. The patient has told staff that her mother revealed the identity of the man in her nightmares to be Freddy Krueger, accused child murderer from the same neighborhood who died in a suspicious fire years earlier after being released due to an improperly executed search warrant, after their return to the family house. While the description of the man in the patient's dreams do match that of Freddy Krueger, any further connection, such as the patient's belief that Mr Krueger was killing the children of Elm Street in their dreams, are unsubstantiated and improbable to the point of being considered impossible. During her period of confinement to the house, the patient reportedly booby-trapped the interior in an attempt to "pull Krueger out of the dream and kill him". Before she could make any such attempt, however, her boyfriend, Mr Lantz, was murdered in his house across the street. The perpetrator has yet to be apprehended, and the police are still struggling to find any suspects for the grizzly crime - the coroner's report was unable to state an exact cause of death other than "massive trauma" due to the nature of the remains, which were largely liquefied.
The events that followed in the Thompson residence are unclear. There appears to have been some sort of struggle, possibly a break-in, resulting in the death of Marge Thompson. The patient, Nancy Thompson, was admitted to the psychiatric unit as a patient the next day by her father. She was reported to have said, on the car trip over, "why didn't it work?" What, exactly, it was is yet to be ascertained. The patient spent the next month at Springwood hospital's psychiatric unit, but has shown no improvement. On the date of her eighteenth birthday, she is scheduled for transfer to the facilities at Eichen House. The staff there should be aware that patient is non-compliant with certain forms of treatment, such as sedation and any drowsy or sleep-inducing medication, adn ahs been known to grow violent should any measures be taken to force her to sleep.
Relatives: Donald Thompson (Father); Marge Thompson (Mother) – DECEASED
Details of Transfer;
From: Springwood hospital, psychiatric unit
To: Eichen House
Reason for Transfer: Inadequate facilities for proper treatment of patient, refusal to cooperate with treatment by patient
Other Notes: Relevant details regarding the patient have been included below. The information is based on newspaper articles, police transcripts, eyewitness reports and the patient’s own journal, as well as relevant notes from doctors and staff at the hospital. A more detailed report of the patient’s history and current condition has been mailed to the new facility, Eichen "Echo" House, for the use of the staff there.
The patient was first admitted after the deaths of her school-mates and friends, Tina Gray and Rod Lane, just before the deaths of the patient's boyfriend, Glen Lantz, and mother, Marge Thompson. All, with the exception of the patient's mother, had complained of nightmares prior to their deaths or, in the case of the patient, admittance to the psychiatric unit at Springwood hospital. For reasons as of yet unclear, whether by coincidence or some form of shared delusion, the teenagers all reported having nightmares about the same man, described as having "gloves with knives as claws" and "wearing a green and red stripped sweater with a brown hat" who chased them in their dreams. The patient told eyewitnesses and staff that things that happened in the dreams came true. In spite of the unusual timing of the deaths, all had plausible explanations, unrelated to the supernatural; Ms Gray was believed to have been murdered by her on-again off-again boyfriend, Mr Lane. Mr Lane was later arrested on suspicion of her murder while attempting to flee from the police, wearing clothes soaked with Ms Gray's blood. In spite of the evidence against him, Mr Lane insisted on his innocence in his girlfriend's murder, as did the patient. On the night of Mr Lane's arrest, the patient, expressing concern for Mr Lane, insisted on having the police lieutenant Donald Thompson, also the patient's father, check on Mr Lane, who was discovered hanging in his cell. The coroner's report stated Mr Lane's official cause of death as suicide, although the patient vocalized her belief that Mr Lane's death was the result of foul play. The patient's mother, Mrs Thompson, now deceased, brought the patient in for evaluation following Mr Lane's funeral.
While sleeping under observation, the patient, upon entering deep sleep, gave off unusual readings through the equipment being used to monitor brainwaves, and appeared to have some sort of fit, struggling and thrashing, resulting in several slashes being opened on her wrist. Upon awakening, the patient was reported to have been holding a hat, origins unknown (the staff observing the proceedings insist that they are unaware of how the patient managed to get hold of it, having checked her possessions before commencing observation). The patient insisted that she had pulled the hat out of her dreams, and that her injuries were the result of being attacked in her dreams. A streak of the patient's hair was also observed to have changed colour to white, although the cause of this sudden change are as of yet undetermined. Against all advice from the staff, Mrs Thompson returned home with the patient after the wounds had been dressed and treated.
Staff have recently become aware of Mrs Marge Thompson's alcoholism and controlling nature, and the mother's confinement of the patient to the house following their return home. The patient has told staff that her mother revealed the identity of the man in her nightmares to be Freddy Krueger, accused child murderer from the same neighborhood who died in a suspicious fire years earlier after being released due to an improperly executed search warrant, after their return to the family house. While the description of the man in the patient's dreams do match that of Freddy Krueger, any further connection, such as the patient's belief that Mr Krueger was killing the children of Elm Street in their dreams, are unsubstantiated and improbable to the point of being considered impossible. During her period of confinement to the house, the patient reportedly booby-trapped the interior in an attempt to "pull Krueger out of the dream and kill him". Before she could make any such attempt, however, her boyfriend, Mr Lantz, was murdered in his house across the street. The perpetrator has yet to be apprehended, and the police are still struggling to find any suspects for the grizzly crime - the coroner's report was unable to state an exact cause of death other than "massive trauma" due to the nature of the remains, which were largely liquefied.
The events that followed in the Thompson residence are unclear. There appears to have been some sort of struggle, possibly a break-in, resulting in the death of Marge Thompson. The patient, Nancy Thompson, was admitted to the psychiatric unit as a patient the next day by her father. She was reported to have said, on the car trip over, "why didn't it work?" What, exactly, it was is yet to be ascertained. The patient spent the next month at Springwood hospital's psychiatric unit, but has shown no improvement. On the date of her eighteenth birthday, she is scheduled for transfer to the facilities at Eichen House. The staff there should be aware that patient is non-compliant with certain forms of treatment, such as sedation and any drowsy or sleep-inducing medication, adn ahs been known to grow violent should any measures be taken to force her to sleep.
PRESENTS WITH
The patient refuses to sleep, resorting to extreme measures to stay awake, including consumption of dangerous amount of caffeine, should she be given access to it, as well as inflicting small amounts of pain to prevent falling asleep. The patient insists that the actions of the subject of her nightmares, the deceased suspected child murderer Freddy Krueger, transfer from dreams into the real word, and that he is continuing to kill from beyond the grave. The patient believes her friends and mother to have been killed by said nightmare person, despite evidence suggesting perfectly explainable, if tragic, deaths. The patient is also non-compliant with attempts to medicate, restrain or sedate.