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News > Air Force firefighters save civilian’s life
Air Force firefighters save civilian's life

Posted 10/12/2012   Updated 10/15/2012 Email story   Print story

    


by Airman 1st Class Trevor Rhynes
86th Airlift Wing Public Affairs


10/12/2012 - RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany  -- When a firefighter saves a life, one probably pictures a firefighter in full gear running through a burning building to get to someone or using the Jaws of Life, freeing a victim trapped in a vehicle.

Three firefighters from the 886th Civil Engineer Squadron, however, saved a life by using emergency-medical technician skills.

"We responded to a report of a female with a possible stroke," said Staff Sgt. Robert Davis, 886th CES firefighter. "Once we arrived on scene, we found her on the ground, unresponsive and not breathing."

The crew assessed the situation and reacted by performing CPR.

"The signs and symptoms she was showing were indicative of administrating CPR with an automated external defibrillator, providing compressions as well as rescue breaths," he said. "After four and a half minutes, she was breathing on her own but we continued rescue breaths until the off-base ambulance arrived."

German medics arrived on scene and transported the patient to a hospital in Kaiserslautern, where she was treated.

The team consisted of three NCOs; Staff Sgts., Theodore Warshaw, Solomon Rigsby and Davis.

"Normally a crew is made up of four or five people, there's one NCO, one senior airman and two airmen 1st class," Warshaw said. "It just so happened that we were all in one truck together."

Firefighters train multiple hours a day for many different things, ranging from rescuing people trapped in cars, to fighting fires, to acting as EMTs, he said.

"We have so many different responsibilities that our training time varies," Warshaw said. "I can guarantee that for at least three hours a day we're doing some type of training, whether it's in the classroom, or outside doing an exercise simulating buildings on fire, an aircraft crash or pulling someone from a manhole."

For a call like this, adrenaline kicked in and affected how these firefighters reacted.

"My mind went blank and time slowed down," Warshaw said. "Four minutes normally isn't that long, but in a situation like this, where we are doing CPR for that long, it seems like an eternity."

The firefighters relied on past training to ensure a positive outcome for the situation.

"We train so much on a day to day basis that in a situation like this our training definitely kicks in and takes over," Warshaw said. "It's nice to see that the training we do pays off when we get a call like this with an outcome like this. I was surprised by how much my training took over, it was like muscle memory."

The woman was released from hospital care days later and has been in stable condition since.



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