Tag: EMS

Lawyer Geoffrey Fieger Hired

Lawyer Geoffrey Fieger was hired by the family of a woman declared dead by Southfield Fire Department staff. The family has retained superstar attorney Geoffrey Fieger to investigate possibly negligence on the part of authorities who arrived at the scene.

Lawyer Geoffrey Fieger Hired To Represent Family

Fieger, based in Southfield, held a digital press conference Tuesday to discuss the case. He said the woman, Timesha Beauchamp, 20, was in a body bag for at least two hours before being found alive by workers at the funeral home.

The Southfield Fire Department responded to a 911 call at about 7:35 a.m. Sunday. A 20-year-old woman was reported as being unresponsive, authorities said.

Fieger said the woman suffered what was “apparently a seizure” during her normal morning routine: wake up, eat, change clothes, and take a breathing treatment. She was not breathing, and her lips had lost color. Beauchamp has had cerebral palsy from birth, and is on three breathing treatments a day.

“That may be incidentally involved; we don’t know,” Fieger said.

It was after police and medics arrived that “the entire sad scenario gets very, very murky,” Fieger said.

Medics tried “life-saving efforts” on the woman for about half an hour, said Southfield Fire Chief Johnny Menifee said. But the woman showed “no signs of life.”

Fieger said a godmother of the woman, who works in the medical field, was at the house at the time, and told authorities that Beauchamp was not dead. But they allegedly argued that the movements were involuntary, a reaction to the life-saving efforts just applied, Fieger added.

After the fire department consulted with an emergency room doctor at Providence Hospital, who declared the woman dead, the Oakland County Medical Examiner signed off on releasing the woman’s body to the family. The woman was placed into a body bag at about 9 a.m., Fieger said. The James H. Cole Home for Funerals, in Detroit at 16100 Schaefer, took custody of the woman’s body just before 11:30 a.m., Fieger said.

But workers who opened the body bag realized the woman was not dead. The workers were preparing to embalm Beauchamp.

“She was alive, her eyes were open, and she was breathing,” Fieger said.

They called 911, and Detroit Fire Department medics arrived. The woman was breathing. Her heart was beating at a rate of 80 beats per minute.

Beauchamp remains hospitalized in critical condition, said Brian Taylor, a spokesman for the Detroit Medical Center.

Lawyer Geoffrey Fieger Background

Geoffrey Fieger is a veteran of the legal battlefield. His command of the law, both as a trial litigator and as a scholar, has made him one of the most sought-after attorneys in the nation. Though he has always practiced from his firm’s home in Southfield, Michigan, he is known all over the world for his charismatic trial presence and his refusal to back down from the battles that matter.

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North Carolina EMT Angel Cureton Needs A Heart Transplant

Angel Cureton, Shelby North Carolina EMT

Angel Cureton knows how quick medical tragedy can change a life. As a North Carolina EMT she wanted to help make those situations better. She didn’t think at 43 it might happen to her per reports in her local newspaper.

Cureton, a Shelby EMT experienced a massive heart attack in June. Since then Cureton has been in and out of surgery to repair the damage, now she is facing the decision of having a heart transplant or living off a machine for years.

Angel Cureton, Shelby North Carolina EMT

“Just a few weeks before I was getting up and going about. In a blink of an eye, everything changed,” she said.

An EMT Knows: Moments Matter When Little Things Matter

June 15 started like any other morning for Angel and her husband, Ricky Cureton. She got up around 7 a.m. to get ready for the day, but as she was getting ready Ricky noticed she looked off. She had experienced an arterial heart spasm eight years before this, but since then Angel had been fine.

“She took a nitro and sat down on the floor in our bathroom,” he said.

After that episode, Angel decided to continue to work.

“I went to work and got there around 7:45. I just didn’t feel right,” she said.

Her fellow EMTs put her on a heart monitor to make sure she was OK. At first, nothing abnormal showed up, but they kept monitoring to be sure and called Ricky to come pick her up.

“By the time they got the stretcher to her office, she could barely walk,” he said.

The EMT Becomes The Patient

Angel Cureton was packed into an ambulance and rushed to Atrium Health-Cleveland in Shelby.

“We went to the hospital, and it was a blur from there,” she said.

“They put her on nitro drip and couldn’t get relief. She started having a lot more pain,” Ricky said.

Angels condition was deteriorating, and she needed more help than could be done in Shelby. She was flown do Charlotte for a double bypass.

During all of this, Angel was vaguely aware of what was going on. She began hearing codes and words she used in the past on patients. What she heard wasn’t reassuring.

While most people don’t understand the codes they hear as doctor’s work on them, she knew that she was having a heart attack that it was causing major damage.

“It’s a little scarier,” she said.

Doctors with the catheterization laboratory in Charlotte were able to get Angel into surgery quickly.

“By the time I got there she was coming out of surgery. The doctor said she is doing alright but said he didn’t like some of the things he saw,” said Ricky.

The next few days were filled with ups and downs as Angel tried to recover but one night in the ICU her conditions went downhill. She was taken back to surgery for a double by-pass. She began to make improvements after that, her husband said.

A Trip To The Beach Isn’t

The improvements were enough that the couple was given the all-clear to head to a beach family trip that was planned months ahead of time. They packed their bags and headed south to meet up with their kids and other family members.

“We got there and she did good the whole ride,” Ricky said.

But things took a turn, and Angel was transported back to Charlotte.

There, doctors discovered the double bypass had failed, and her heart was not circulating blood properly. After another round of tests and medication, the Curetons were sent back home. But Angel needs a heart transplant or left ventricular assist device that would keep her heart pumping.

Paying the Bills

As the couple worked on keeping Angel alive, the medical bills began to pile up and neither of them has medical insurance.

“The helicopter ride is $36,000. The open heart surgery is $150,000 and that was just one surgery,” Ricky said.

The two are working to get her on disability, but the process has been anything but easy. With his wife’s income gone and their saving dwindling, they have received support from some community members and friends.

Family friends also organized a fundraiser with Lafayette Street Grill in Shelby today. The restaurant will be giving 10 percent of all sales on Friday to the family to help pay the medical bills. There will also be t-shirts for sale and live music by OLM & N-Repair.

“If she is well enough, Angel will be out there,” Ricky said.

Angel Cureton: One More Hospital Visit

Two weeks ago, while on a telemedicine call, the doctor noticed the Angel was not looking well and suggested she get to the hospital immediately. One of the surgeries needed to happen now or she would die.

But without insurance, the two were fighting a battle to get any surgery approved.

“The doctors basically said we are not going to let this woman just sit here and die,” Angel said.

She received the left ventricular assist device and has been feeling better with each passing day.

“I have to brag on the doctors in Charlotte. They have been amazing. If it was not for them, I would not be here today,” she said.

She may be on the mend, but there are still many battles ahead. The device she has in place now can last for years, but doctors are still recommending a heart transplant. With O negative blood, it will be difficult for her to find a match, so no decisions have been made yet.

Rescue The Rescuers

Never Forget 9-11 Foundation has a #RescueTheRescuer Fund set up to assist in cases like this. If you are able, please donate here.

Angel Cureton Fundraiser

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Paramedic Arrested for Pointing Gun

A 34-year-old paramedic with Mobile Life Support Services (MLSS), Brandon Selleck, has been arrested by New York State Police for pointing a handgun at the victim during a domestic dispute.

The Troopers say that on July 7, just before 1:00 am, Selleck was involved in a domestic dispute in Wappingers Falls, leading the other party to report it to police.

Several hours later, at 12:30 pm, Troopers arrested Selleck at work at the Mobile Life ambulance station in Buchanan.  The paramedic was charged with felony Criminal Possession of a Weapon and the misdemeanors of Menacing with a Weapon and Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance.  He was released on his own recognizance.

Selleck’s charge of possession of a controlled substance is because he had prescription amphetamines without a valid prescription. It is unclear if his behavior is related to undiagnoses mental health issues.

MLSS Paramedics On Duty

Other MLSS Paramedic Comments

Selleck’s coworkers are angered that Mobile Life allowed him to return to work the following day.  “He pointed a gun during an argument.  That’s frightening,” said a fellow MLSS paramedic.  A second medic added “To make it worse, he supposedly had illegal amphetamines.  If he is using drugs and is capable of pointing a pistol at another person, we don’t feel safe around him.”  The coworkers asked to have their identities withheld for fear of retaliation by Selleck.

 

Michigan Funeral Home Brings Back Dead

A Michigan funeral home brings back the dead ti life. A Detroit woman on Sunday “did not have signs of life,” according to paramedics who declared her dead earlier in the day, but staff at the James H. Cole Funeral Home found the 20-year-old was breathing and alive.

Michigan Funeral Home

According to local news, paramedics with Southfield Fire Department on Sunday responded to a call about a woman in cardiac arrest. Southfield Fire Dept. released a statement stating in part, “The paramedics performed CPR and other life reviving methods for 30 minutes. Given medical readings and the condition of the patient, it was determined at that time that she did not have signs of life.”

Reports indicate a police officer “allegedly saw her move and breathe and called the fire crews back, but fire crews claim those were the side effects of the medication given to her.”

Michigan Funeral Home

The woman was taken to the Cole Funeral Home in Detroit. Employees there discovered she was still breathing and called EMS. She was taken to a hospital. No other information on the location, her name or current condition was immediately available Monday.

“We couldn’t believe it,” said Dave Fornell, deputy commissioner of the Detroit fire department, who added that her heart rate was 80.

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FDNY EMS: Lives Are At Risk

FDNY EMS Respond

The FDNY EMS union President says “lives are at risk” as the City of New York plans to cut 400 EMS positions.

FDNY EMS Local 257 President Oren Barzilay said in a statement to NBC News, “Even with the threat of a second wave of COVID19 looming and two recent outbreaks in Brooklyn, Bill de Blasio and his team at City Hall wants to balance the city’s budget on our backs, eliminating some 400 emergency medical responder positions and placing every New Yorker’s life at risk.”

FDNY EMS Respond To Trouble Breathing

Mayor Bill de Blasio’s press secretary did not deny that the city was preparing to lay off FDNY EMS providers, and said in a statement that the city is dealing with a budget hole due to a lack of stimulus funds and borrowing authority. He said the city is working with unions to avoid some layoffs where possible but that every city agency is facing layoffs.

De Blasio previously said in May that FDNY EMS layoffs were “on the table” due to an estimated $7.4 billion in revenue losses from the pandemic.

FDNY EMS

The FDNY has seen historic call volumes during the COVID19 pandemic, with EMS providers responding to up to 6,500 calls per day, the most since 9-11. At least eleven FDNY members, including four EMS providers, have died secondary to COVID19.

“Yesterday, we were praised as heroes, essential workers saving lives. Today, the city government treats us like zeros,” Barzilay told NBC. “New Yorkers who lived through this deadly pandemic know otherwise.”

Some responders liken the situation to September 11 when responders were universally praised only to be forgotten when the smoke cleared.

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Panama City (FL) Fire Chief Alex Baird Resigns

Panama City (FL) Fire Chief Alex Baird resigns rather than face disciplinary action for a continuing education scheme. The Florida fire chief has resigned following an internal investigation into allegations he wrongly renewed EMT certifications for more than a dozen firefighters who did not meet the requirements for renewal.

The Panama City Manager Mark McQueen accepted the resignation of Fire Chief Alex Baird, effective immediately, on Tuesday following the results of the investigation, which were delivered to McQueen last Wednesday per local news.

Fire Chief Alex Baird

The investigator from the Allen, Norton & Blue Professional Association wrote that Baird had submitted “a bulk renewal recertification” for 20 firefighter-EMTs at the Panama City department in September 2018, but that only seven of the firefighter-EMTs met the requirements for recertification as of December 1, 2018. The investigator also wrote that, as of March 31, 2019, five firefighter-EMTs had still not completed the required 30 continuing education hours for recertification and continued to work with invalid certificates. One of those firefighter-EMTs, a lieutenant at the department, told Baird he had not completed his hours and did not intend to continue his certification, but Baird failed to decertify him, according to the investigator. The hours in question were normal EMS continuing education hours required to recertify.

Assistant Chief Kent Taylor will serve as acting fire chief following Baird’s departure. The resignation may not stop legal charges. In nearby Escambia County, Florida, four emergency medical responders were charged after falsifying similar records.

Alex Baird

Per the city website, Fire Chief Alex Baird has been actively involved in the Fire Rescue services for over twenty-five years. He began his career as a United States Air Force medic assigned to Homestead Air Force Base in South Florida. In 1989 Chief Baird was hired by the City of Hallandale Beach Department of Fire Rescue as a Firefighter Paramedic. He has moved up through ranks holding the position of Fire Rescue Lieutenant, Division Chief of Emergency Medical Services and Deputy Fire Rescue Chief at his retirement. During his tenure with the City of Hallandale Beach, he had been assigned the tasks of emergency management planning and coordination, and coordination of the City’s Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) program among other projects. On began his service with the City of Panama City on March 3rd, 2014 as the Fire Chief for the City of Panama City’s Fire Department. Chief Baird holds a Master’s in Public Administration from Barry University, is a Florida certified Firefighter and Paramedic. He also holds his Florida Professional Emergency Manager’s Certificate through the Florida Emergency Preparedness Association. Chief Baird is responsible for all emergency services provided to the citizens of Panama City.

Fire Chief Alex Baird

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COVID19 Challenge More Dangerous Than 9-11

COVID19 is taking it’s toll on EMS responders around the country opposite of 9-11.

Per a CBS News Marketwatch article, many EMS responders are leaving the profession. Veteran emergency medical technicians and paramedics have spent decades intubating patients and performing many other medical procedures in cramped ambulances. Now, a growing number of EMS workers are exiting the field for good. The reason: COVID-19 makes the job too dangerous.

COVID19 More Dangerous Than 9-11

“I knew it would probably kill me if I went out there and had multiple exposures — and I’m not a chicken,” said Robert Baer, an EMT in New York City with 29 years on the job, including 23 as an instructor. “I love the job, but my doctors were telling me I shouldn’t be going in the field, that it was very dangerous.”

Baer was among the first responders to the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, and he now suffers from asthma, chronic bronchitis, sleep apnea and other conditions that make him more vulnerable to COVID-19.

COVID19

The new retirements due to COVID19 are a major departure from April when FDNY EMS was on the front lines of battling COVID19. How the virus effects recruitment and retention is yet to be seen lng term.

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South Carolina Fire Chief Health Incident

24% Pay Raise Not Enough For EMS Responders

A Fire Chief Health Incident recently has the South Carolina Senate Minority Leader wanting Aiken County to do a better job of providing emergency medical services, especially in the rural area that is part of his district.

In a letter to County Council Chairman Gary Bunker and other County Council members, dated June 15, Nikki Setzler described a situation that occurred last month when Hollow Creek Fire Department Chief Glenn Poole “had a health incident” and an ambulance was called.

Fire Chief Health Incident Earns Seztler's Ire

“I am told that it took two (2) hours for him to be transported to the Lexington County Hospital,” Setzler wrote. “Providing ambulance service to the citizens of Aiken County is a responsibility of County Council, and therefore I am contacting you to express my concern.”

Setzler, a Lexington Democrat, represents Senate District 26, which includes the northern portion of Aiken County along with parts of Calhoun, Lexington and Saluda counties.

Fire Chief Health Incident Not Only Issue

“In speaking with representatives of the various volunteer fire departments and other constituents, I am told that this (a long wait for an ambulance) is more a regular occurrence rather than an exception,” Setzler wrote. “I am further informed that of the three EMS stations located in Wagener, Monetta and Windsor, it is common for only one station to be staffed with personnel on site while the other two are closed.”

As a result, an ambulance sometimes has to be sent from another part of Aiken County. That “puts people in need of immediate medical attention at an increased risk,” Setzler wrote, adding that they also might die while waiting for transport.

Setzler called for the issues involving the staffing of EMS stations and prolonged ambulance response times to be resolved by County Council “as soon as possible.”

County Administrator Clay Killian told the Aiken Standard on Monday that County Council “is very aware” of the problems and is “very interested in making sure the service is everything it needs to be.”

The two biggest challenges are the need to increase pay and the decreasing number of people who want to be emergency medical technicians and paramedics, according to Killian.

During the 2019-2020 fiscal year, County Council raised the salaries of EMS workers by 4% and then by 10%.

During its meeting Tuesday, the panel is scheduled to consider the third and final reading of an ordinance to establish the 2020-2021 fiscal year budget for the county. It includes a 3% across-the-board pay raise for county employees.

Bunker has told the Aiken Standard that he would like to give EMS and Sheriff’s Office workers a 5% increase instead of 3%.

But that still might not be enough because the county faces stiff competition for EMS employees from other counties nearby and from private companies.

“The pipeline is not big enough to fill the vacancies that are occurring, and there is kind of a hiring war right now,” Killian said. “It’s difficult work, and there are not a lot of people who want to do that kind of work. We’re trying to encourage people to go to school, and we’re paying for people to go to school. There are more jobs open than there are (qualified) people for them.”

Aiken County has tried to fill the gaps through agreements with Aiken Rescue, a nonprofit, and SouthStar Emergency Medical Services, a private company, to make their ambulances available to respond to 9-1-1 calls.

“The bottom line is we know this is a service that we’ve got to provide, and we’re going to try to do everything we can to provide it at the highest level we can,” Killian said. “I don’t know what it’s going to take, but we are going to continue to work on it. We’re running 20,000 calls a year, so it’s a busy, busy service. And as our community grows, we are going to have to put more services out there.”

Killian could not confirm that it took two hours to transport Poole to a hospital but said, “It was longer than we would have liked.” One reason why it took longer than usual was because the SouthStar vehicle that responded broke down, Killian reported.

Also, “the Wagener truck was already on a call,” he said.

When there is not enough staff to go around, the current strategy is to close EMS stations in rural areas because “the likelihood of a call coming out of Aiken and North Augusta is much higher,” Killian explained.

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Colorado Paramedic Dies In COVID19 Response

A Colorado paramedic dies in the COVID19 response. Paul Cary, 66, volunteered to go to New York with Ambulnz’s coronavirus response team, his employer confirmed to KDVR News. Paul from the Denver metro area died Thursday after treating COVID-19 patients in New York City.

Colorado Paramedic Dies In COVID19 Response

Cary tested positive for the virus about one week ago.

Like September 11 attacks, responders from across the nation are joining their comrades from across the country. “He risked his own health and safety to protect others and left this world a better place. We are at peace knowing that Paul did what he loved and what he believed in, right up until the very end,” his family said in a statement.

Colorado Paramedic

Before working as an EMS paramedic for Ambulnz, an ambulance services provider, Cary spent more than 30 years with Aurora Fire Rescue as a firefighter and paramedic. Cary is survived by two sons and four grandchildren. Funeral details have not yet been announced.

COVID19 Line of Duty Deaths

Fire and police associations are working towards creating a Line of Duty Death – LODD list for confirmed deaths secondary to COVID19.

Conquering COVID19 – FDNY EMS Responds

Conquering COVID19

The New York Times profiled two paramedics conquering COVID19 in a piece about EMS response to COVID19 in New York City. The article which looks at the lives of Kenny Cheng and Sean Mahoney responding to “regular” calls and COVID19. The surprise in the reporter’s voice seems to hit the mark again and again: ‘Such is the disturbing new normal for the city’s paramedics, whose days can be mundane until — suddenly — they are not.’ It’s as if the media does not realize this is day to day responding to other people’s worst day.

Conquering COVID19

Conquering COVID19: From classroom to emergency room

The two paramedics, Cheng and Mahoney, are instructors at FDNY Fort Totten (Queens) Station 60. Like 9-11 and Superstorm Sandy, the two have been called back to the streets to alleviate staffing responding to the numerous calls in New York.

Each day the two EMS Instructors with their colleagues gather for a moment of silence. The article recounts the updates on friends and co-workers who contracted COVID19. One comrade in fighting the ugly disease, Idris Bey, was named on Monday, but died by Friday, just four days later.

This pandemic is a reminder that the bravest are often forgotten in their fight against silent killers which are far less spectacular than gun fights or high rise fires.

Conquering COVID19: Protocols

The article also talks briefly about the bizarre symptomology of this disease which has confounded both medics and ER staff. Standard ACLS protocols do not seem to be as effective – and may be inapproppriate according to some researchers.

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