Category: EMS

CPR On COVID19 Air Passenger

CPR On COVID19 Air Passenger

Holiday madness for holiday goers as CPR on COVID19 air passenger was required on a recent United flight to Los Angeles.

In what was described as a terrifying ordeal for nearby passengers, the man was seen on the plane shaking and sweating and having a hard time breathing even before the flight took off.

His condition deteriorated rapidly once in the air and the captain made the decision to perform an emergency landing in order for the man to receive medical attention.

The crew asked if there were any doctors onboard and a number of people got up to help.

COVID19 CPR In Air

COVID19 CPR In Air

Some passengers detailed how during CPR they could hear the patient’s  rib bones crack as chest compressions were carried out before he started turning blue.

Tony Aldapa was one of the passengers on board who helped perform CPR on the man.

‘I got up out of my seat, let them know “Hey I know CPR” and asked “Do you need some extra help?” I can tap in and help with chest compressions. That’s how it all started.

‘By the point that I got there to the point where the fire department got on board, it was at least 45 minutes,’ Aldapa told press outlets.

‘There was no mouth-to-mouth at all. We were doing chest compressions and they had him on the oxygen mask from the plane, then once we had a medical bag that is kept on board we used an ambu-bag which is a bag that you squeeze to give breaths, that’s what we used for breathing,’ Aldapa continued when talking about CPR On COVID19 Air Passenger that has yet to be identified.

COVID19 CPR In Air

While talking to New Orleans EMS responders, the man’s wife admitted that her husband had tested positive for coronavirus meaning he likely lied when checking in for the flight.

During check-in, all United passengers have to self-report on whether they have experienced any coronavirus symptoms.

After the passenger was offloaded in New Orleans, his seat was wiped down, and the plane, a Boeing 737-900 with capacity for 179 people, continued its journey to Los Angeles.

CPR On COVID19 Air Passenger

CPR on a passenger is difficult in the best of circumstances. Our own board member, Christopher Suprun, has been on several flights where a medical emergency occured – everything from a illness that is getting worse to a person unconscious.

COVID19 CPR In Air

US commercial airlines carry a medical kit, known by multiple names, that can be opened by medical personnel with permission of the Pilot-in-Charge. This equipment can contain IV fluids, IV catheters, and cardiac drugs including epinephrine, lidocaine, and atropine.

United Airlines Statement: CPR On COVID19 Air Passenger

Aldapa described completing the flight “covered in my own sweat and in that man’s urine.”

He continued “I knew the risks involved in performing CPR on someone that potentially has COVID but I made the choice to do so anyways. I spoke with the passengers wife about his medical history and she never mentioned he was positive, she said he was scheduled to have a test done in LA.”

It is unclear how many of the passengers might develop symptoms given the enclosed air system on commercial flights.

The Centers for Disease Control has contacted United Airlines regarding this flight and passenger. It is unclear if they have also sough passenger manifests or identified the air crew and passengers who provided care to the COVID19 positive patient.

United issued the following statements:

‘Our flight diverted to New Orleans due to a medical emergency and paramedics transported the passenger to a local hospital where the individual was pronounced deceased. We have been in touch with his family and have extended our sincerest condolences to them for their loss.

‘At the time of the diversion, we were informed he had suffered a cardiac arrest, so passengers were given the option to take a later flight or continue on with their travel plans.

Now that the CDC has contacted us directly, we are sharing requested information with the agency so they can work with local health officials to conduct outreach to any customer the CDC believes may be at risk for possible exposure or infection.

‘The health and safety of our employees and customers is our highest priority, which is why we have various policies and procedures in place such as mask mandates and requiring customers to complete a ‘Ready-to-Fly’ checklist before the flight acknowledging they have not been diagnosed with COVID-19 in the last 14 days and do not have COVID-related symptoms,’ the statement read.

Passengers who traveled on the fateful flight unloaded a barrage of questions to United on social media asking the same questions any sensible person would ask.

CPR On COVID19 Air Passenger

CPR On COVID19 Air Passenger

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One Dead, Two Arkansas Paramedics Shot

Two Arkansas Paramedics Shot

One person is dead and two Arkansas paramedics were wounded in a shooting Thursday while they responded to a medical emergency in Pine Bluff, Arkansas.

Pine Bluff (AR) police say the medics were at a residence in Pine Bluff aiding a woman with knee pain when the patient’s boyfriend, identified by authorities as Kevin Curl Jr., 22, approached them and began arguing with them per a local media source.

Two Arkansas Paramedics Shot

Curl was said to have pushed one of the paramedics who was then punched escalating the situation to gunfire. The two Arkansas paramedics shot were John Spriggs Sr., who reportedly punched Curl before Curl pulled out a firearm, and Joshua Godfrey, 35.

Curl shot both medics approximately three times in the chest, pelvic and abdominal areas, according to a police news release.

Authorities said Spriggs returned fire, striking Curl, who was later found dead inside the residence with a gunshot wound to the chest. Spriggs was found by officers lying on the ground next to the ambulance while Godfrey, 35, was found sitting in the back of the ambulance.

The paramedics were transported to the hospital to be treated for gunshot wounds. The original female patient was also transported to the hospital for her injuries.

The shooting is under investigation by Pine Bluff detectives.

The Arkansas Ambulance Association released a statement on Facebook saying, “Our thoughts and prayers are with members of the EASI family in Pine Bluff this morning. At last report, the EMS personnel are in serious but stable condition following surgery.

Two Arkansas Paramedics Shot

Two Arkansas Paramedics Shot – Both Employees Of EASI

Both paramedics work for Emergency Ambulance Service, Inc. (EASI).

Emergency Ambulance Service, Inc. (EASI) is the ambulance provider for Pine Bluff and Jefferson County; Warren and Bradley County; Star City and Lincoln County; Rison and Cleveland County; England and the southern third of Lonoke County; DeWitt and the southern two-thirds of Arkansas County

EASI has a very long and distinguished history in Pine Bluff. Having been in operation in Pine Bluff for over 45 years, we are one of the oldest ambulance services in the state.

We will update this story as details emerge.

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Limon Area Fire Protection District Hit By Tractor Trailer

Limon Area Fire Protection District

A Colorado area ambulance from the Limon Area Fire Protection District was heavily damaged after being struck by a semi-truck at a crash scene on Tuesday.

Limon Area Fire Protection District

Limon Area Fire Protection District crews had responded to the scene of a jack-knifed semi-trailer when another semi traveling on the icy roads crashed into their rig.

The agency posted photographs of the accident on Facebook, writing, “This is what happens when on scene and people don’t pay attention. People slow down when you see emergency vehicle’s.”

Limon County EMT Kim Clymer told the Oil City News that no one was in the ambulance at the time of the collision and that there were no injuries as a result of the secondary crash.

Saline County (IL) experienced an ambulance accident on Sunday when the driver went through a red light striking another driver. Earlier in the year FDNY Ladder 102 failed to yield and struck an ambulance.

Limon Area Fire Protection District

Limon Area Fire Protection District is the fire protection district serving the town of Limon, Colorado, and parts of Lincoln and Elbert counties in Colorado. It has been erroneously reported on other sites as being in Wyoming.

Limon Area Fire Protection District

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Saline County Ambulance Accident

Per Issac Smith of the Southern Illinoisian two people were injured after a Saline County Ambulance Accident where an ambulance and pickup truck crashed Sunday.

According to a news release from Illinois State Police, the Saline County ambulance accident happened just after 8:30 p.m., when Brian Skinner, 25, of Christopher, approached the intersection of Illinois 142 while traveling north on U.S. 45. The ambulance lights and sirens were active as he approached the intersection.

Saline County Ambulance Accident

Brian Baird, 44, of Harrisburg, was approaching the intersection traveling south on Illinois 142 in a truck.

ISP’s preliminary investigation indicated that Baird had a green light and proceeded through the intersection. Skinner had a red light and failed to yield, entering the intersection and striking Baird, according to the release.

The ambulance had two passengers, Kristopher Melia, 36, of Marion, and Lisa Wenzel, 56, of De Soto. Both were taken to an area hospital for minor injuries. Both drivers were uninjured, according to the release.

Skinner was cited with failure to yield at a stop intersection, police said. The accident was similar to others recently – including one in New York – when emergency drivers do not yield right of way.

Saline County Ambulance Accident

Saline County Ambulance is located in Harrisburg, Illinois. This is their first accident we are aware of to date.

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The First Five To Receive COVID19 Vaccine

“The First Five” to receive COVID19 Vaccine in our nation’s capital have been announced. Washington D.C. officials have reported that five members of the D.C. Fire and EMS will be among the first in the district to receive the COVID19 vaccine on Wednesday.

The five members, dubbed “The First Five” in a district press release, are Acting Fire and EMS Chief John Donnelly, Medical Director Dr. Robert Holman, Lts. Joseph Papariello and Keishea Jackson and Firefighter-EMT Julio Quinteros.

“Today, we have hope. After a long and tragic nine months, help is finally on the way,” D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said in a statement. “The First Five are sending a strong message about the importance of this vaccine to protect them, their families and loved ones, their patients and coworkers, and our entire city.”

Kaiser Permanente is distributing the vaccine when it receives its initial doses this Wednesday. The district will receive an initial allotment of 6,825 doses that will be distributed between Kaiser Permanente and five other hospitals. The follow other parts of the country in vaccine distrubution including New York where Sandra Lindsay received the first dose in a non-trial setting.

The First Five To Receive COVID19 Vaccine

“I’m getting vaccinated for my city. In the last nine months, I’ve seen COVID devastate my department,” said Jackson, one of The First Five, in a statement. “I’ve seen my brothers and sisters go into the hospital. I’ve seen them with severe symptoms – things we never thought we would see. I’m getting vaccinated for my coworkers, I’m getting vaccinated for my family, and I’m getting vaccinated to make a change.”

The First Five To Receive COVID19 Vaccine

Some jurisdictions are moving fire and EMS out of the initial distribution of vaccinations despite a push by the International Association of Firefighters and others. Part of the reason may be the public firefighter unions in New York saying more than fifty percent of their members will not take it.

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Brooklyn EMT Robbery Suspect Video Released

Brooklyn EMT robbery suspect video has been released by New York police. Officers believe tis person to be responsible for robbing EMTs at gunpoint.

It shows the man leaving the building with what appears to be a medical bag over his shoulder. EMTs were lured to the building by a false 911 call last week. In a similar incident anjother ambulance crew were victims of a robbery on December 7 in Brownsville.

No one was injured in either incident.

Brooklyn EMT Robbery Suspect Video

Brooklyn EMT Robbery Suspect Video

Anyone who has information regarding this incident is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-8477 or for Spanish, 1-888-577-4782. Tips can also be sent to the NYPDTips Twitter account or submitted online at NYPDCrimeStoppers.com.

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Lower COVID19 Vaccine Priority For EMS Per Cuomo

COVID19 Vaccine Priority

EMS will have a lower COVID19 vaccine priority per Governor Andrew Cuomo (NY) and Governor Jared Polis (CO).

EMS organizations are now calling on the state to let their workers get the first doses, but there may not be enough to go around due to poor planning and preparation.

COVID19 Vaccine Priority

The state is getting 170,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine if it gets FDA approval. The governor is hoping for that to happen soon. That first batch will be divvied up among healthcare workers and those in nursing homes.

Lower COVID19 Vaccine Priority While Others Refuse Vaccine

The International Association of Fire Chiefs and International Association of Firefighters lobbied for their responders to be at the front of the line despite a recent survey of a large union saying fifty percent of its membership did not want the vaccine.

 

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Attacked: Brooklyn Hospital EMTs Robbed At Gunpoint

Brooklyn Hospital EMTs

Two Brooklyn Hospital EMTs were robbed at gunpoint when they responded to a fake 911 call at a New York City Housing Authority apartment building, officials and sources said Tuesday.

The EMTs were taking the elevator in a Sackman Street building — part of the Seth Low Houses — near Belmont Avenue in Brownsville about 11 p.m. Monday when a man stepped into the elevator as it reached the 11th floor and pulled a gun on them.

Brooklyn Hospital EMTs

The gunman swiped their medical bag and ran off, officials said. The bag was later found inside the building, but the EMTs’ tablet and radio that linked them to the city’s 911 dispatch system was missing.

Neither EMT was harmed. The two work for Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center in Brooklyn, but also respond to 911 calls that city medics respond to, officials said.

The call that sent them to the Seth Low Houses turned out to be a false alarm, but it was not immediately clear if it was directly linked to the robbery, sources with knowledge of the case said.

Brooklyn Hospital EMTs – Not Only Victims

Violence against EMS personnel is a global issue. Research is desperately needed to determine why the number of incidents is so high and what can be done to better prevent harm to those who risk their lives to help others.

We’ve long known EMS personnel face a risk of occupational fatality similar to those of police and firefighters and a risk of nonfatal injury that’s much higher.

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Kidder County (ND) Ambulance Service Hit Hard By COVID19 December 2020

Kidder County Ambulance Service

Kidder County Ambulance Service, like their sister agencies in bigger departments, have been on the frontline in the fight against COVID19.

The Kidder County Ambulance Service takes care of a more rural part of the state, serving six communities — and they say it’s bad. It’s not just big city medical facilities facing capacity issues.

Kidder County Ambulance Service

In an interview MonaThompson, EMS Director for Kidder County Ambulance, said, “Come fall time where we started to see this really big increase in calls, it’s kind of gotten a little bit overwhelming.”

During the last two weeks, they have seen an influx of calls and say it’s beginning to take a mental and physical toll on their staff.

“The one thing I did tell them, just a few days ago, if they become overwhelmed, they just need to let me know and I’ll take them off of the call shift. We’ll have someone else cover their shift because I’m beginning to see that,” said Thompson.

The ambulance service is also responding to more calls that aren’t COVID19 related.

“They’ll put off their medical condition or putting off getting help in a timely fashion. So some of these patients are much more sick than what I’ve seen in the past. And unfortunately, I’ve seen also an increase in the death rate amongst our community members. That is really taking its toll,” Thompson continued.

Staff has been running non-stop responding to calls and some calls can take up to four hours before they’re done.

“Usually we’ll, in most out cases, we will go to Bismarck to transport our patients. But they’ve been at max capacity on a couple of different occasions so we had to take patients to Fargo and Jamestown too,” said Thompson.

Thompson says she has also responded to plenty of COVID19 calls that are young adults suffering with serious symptoms.

COVID19 has become more dangerous for responders than 9-11 both medically and politically. Secondary to COVID19 budget shortages several municipalities are considering laying off the very front line responders helping with COVID19 now including FDNY EMS.

This was a preventable tragedy though. Per our Foundation Board Member, Christopher Suprun, COVID19 did not have to be this bad. He wrote an article in March for Rolling Stone detailing his concerns that this would stretch our surge capacity nationally and would be Katrina like.

Kidder County Ambulance Service

Kidder County EMS is a licensed Basic Life Support (BLS) Service with enhanced skills and Advanced Life Support capabilities. They serve the area around Steele, North Dakota.

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FDNY Says No To COVID19 Vaccine

A recent internal Fire Department of New York (FDNY) survey revealed that more than half of the department’s firefighters says no to COVID19 vaccine when it becomes available.

In the past three days, the Uniformed Firefighters Association polled 2,053 members, and around 55 percent of them said they wouldn’t get vaccinated for the virus, Andy Ansbro, the union president, told local New York media. Those polled make up around a quarter of the the union’s 8,200 active members.

No To COVID19 Vaccine

Last month, an FDNY memo stated the department would not mandate firefighters and EMS workers take the COVID vaccine. As of Friday, the FDNY had more than 130 positive cases, with at least six firehouses having three or more cases, a department source told the Post.

In a statement late last month, the International Association of Fire Fighters pushed for firefighters and other first responders to be at the front of the line for the COVID19 vaccine.

A Centers for Disease Control advisory panel, however, recommended last week that health care workers and long-term care facility workers and residents be placed in the 1a priority group for the vaccine.

No To COVID19 Vaccine

Ansbro said that many FDNY firefighters in their 30s and 40s aren’t as threatened by COVID-19, especially if they’ve already battled the virus. He added that he would be getting vaccinated.

“A lot of them probably feel they are not in a risk category, they are younger, stronger, they may have already had it and gotten through it, and feel it’s not their problem,” Ansbro told the Post. “They are more familiar with the coronavirus than they are with the vaccine.”

Skepticism about the vaccine also runs high among FDNY EMS members.

“A few are anxious to get it, but there have been a few dozen (online) responses saying, ‘Thanks, but no  thanks,’ ” Oren Barzilay, president of the Uniformed EMTs, Paramedics and Fire Inspectors union, told the Post. “They were thankful it was not mandatory, because they don’t want to be looked at as test subjects.”

Barzilay added that he would be waiting to see about what independent studies reveal concerning possible side effects before taking the vaccine.

One veteran FDNY member told the Post that the resistance toward the vaccine is a source of frustration.

“The 55 percent doesn’t surprise me. They’re called the Bravest, not the Smartest,” the FDNY member said about members saying “no to COVID19 vaccine.

“It’s saving their lives, and the lives of their co-workers, families, friends, and the people they take care of. They respond to live-threatening medical emergencies. The last thing you want is a family member in dire straits being worked on by an unvaccinated firefighter.”

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