Date: Fri 12-Sep-1997
Date: Fri 12-Sep-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
EMT-accident-response
Full Text:
Training For A Quicker Response To Medical Distress
(with cuts)
BY DOROTHY EVANS
When an accident or heart attack patient isn't breathing, every second counts.
Yet, in a town the size of Newtown, the first responder to an accident scene,
a fire or a cardiac distress call, is just as likely to be a volunteer fireman
as an EMT (Emergency Medical Technician) serving with the Newtown Ambulance
Corps.
For that reason, fire, hospital and ambulance officials agree that the best
and quickest way to deliver life-saving cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR)
and defibrillation to restart a pulse, would be to train and certify the
firefighters as Medical Response Technicians (MRTs).
They have also decided to equip each one of the town's five fire companies
with a defibrillation device.
These decisions, constituting a fundamental change in Newtown's emergency
preparedness, were made in December 1996 as the result of combined efforts by
both ambulance and fire officials working together with Danbury Hospital
Ambulance Corps Chief Steve Rambone.
October 1 is the date they hope to go "on line" with the defibrillator and
certified personnel, said ambulance corps member Debbie Aubin, who organized
several training sessions for the firefighters including a refresher workshop
held last Saturday morning at the Sandy Hook firehouse.
"The whole town will benefit. Even if you're just traveling through, you'll
benefit," said William Halstead, chief of the Sandy Hook Volunteer Fire and
Rescue Company.
"These people are dedicated to saving lives, not just putting out fires," said
John Basso, assistant chief of the ambulance corps.
"We want the people of Newtown to know what approximately 200 volunteers from
all the companies have gone through to get to this point. The town is
blessed," Mr Basso said.
