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Mar 072013
 
There is a distinct warning tone sounded at the Apache Junction Fire District to signal drowning calls. Mark Gomez doesn’t even like to describe it.

“I don’t ever want to hear it,” said Mr. Gomez, AJFD’s EMS/training coordinator. “It raises the hair on the back on my neck.”

Like so many first fire departments in the far East Valley, Mr. Gomez has seen his share of drownings. Some have had happy outcomes. Some have not.

The drowning death May 15 in Glendale of a 17-month-old boy believed to have crawled outside through a built-in doggy-door to the backyard pool is a reminder that fatal accidents can happen anytime, anywhere to anyone.

Between Jan. 1 and May 15 of this year in Maricopa and Pinal counties, there have been 36 water-related incidents, according to the website childrensafetyzone.com. Of those there were 12 deaths, including three children.

Children’s Safety Zone collaborates with local fire departments, hospitals and media to gather statistics and stories on water-related incidents and fatalities in Arizona.

During that time frame, the Queen Creek Fire Department responded to water-related pediatric calls (for ages 5 and younger) for two children. Rural/Metro Fire Department in Pinal County, which serves San Tan Valley, responded to one pediatric call.

Mesa Fire Department has been the busiest this year, responding to three water-related calls “ヤ two pediatric calls and one for a child between 6-12 years.

The Apache Junction Fire District, which serves AJ and Gold Canyon, has responded to two pediatric calls this year.

“That’s two too many,” Tina Gerola, the district’s public education coordinator, said in a phone interview last week. “Our target is zero.”

Drowning is the top cause of injury-related death for children across the United States, according to a press release from the Maricopa Fire Department about May being National Water Safety Month. More than 1,000 children drowned in 2006 nationwide, the release said. Arizona ranked second in the nation for child drownings.

To reduce the number of water-related emergencies in San Tan Valley, RMFD acted as the driving force behind forming the San Tan Valley Public Safety Coalition last year. Its goal is to build a strong and safe community through ongoing events and safety campaigns, according to a story published Oct. 19 in the Independent.

“Rural/Metro started it with Southwest Ambulance, Air Evac, Banner Ironwood, the Pinal County Sheriff’s Office and the Johnson Ranch Homeowners Association,” Colin Williams, public information officer for RMFD, said during a phone interview last week. “We all come together for various events and public awareness campaigns, like the one held a month ago at the Circle K at Ironwood and Ocotillo.

“At the end of the day, it’s all about thinking about drowning prevention,” Mr. Williams continued. “People need to be super vigilant around children. There is no better supervision than direct eye supervision.”

Stay aware

Thomas and Amy Miller know how easy it is to think they had everything under control only to find out they didn’t.

On Aug. 19, the Mesa couple was attending a birthday party at the Apache Junction home of Mrs. Miller’s mother. Their son Owen, then 3, had been swimming with his twin and older sisters but left the pool to go to the bathroom, Mr. Miller said during a phone interview last week. Owen did not remove the floaties he wore on his arms when he went inside.

“I was in the deep end with the girls and had my back to the rest of the pool when I turned and saw Owen’s floaties on top of the water,” Mr. Miller said. “I saw him under the water.”

Mr. Miller dove in and pulled his son out of the water. He told his sister-in-law to call 911 and began CPR. Mr. Miller started compressions while Mrs. Miller started breaths. Owen coughed up water and started crying, Mr. Miller said.

The youngster spent the night in the hospital, where the medical staff told the Millers that Owen appeared well.

Afterward, people from the party commented to Mr. Miller they might have just stood there and waited for the paramedics to begin CPR. It came easily to the dad of three; one week earlier, he had attended a refresher course in CPR conducted through work.

“I’ve taken CPR but had never used it, and when I needed it, it was there. I don’t know if I did it 100 percent correct, but the firemen told me I must have done something right because my son was breathing.”

Reflecting back on the day, Mr. Miller said he was surprised at how much ran through his mind when he saw his son under the water.

“My wife and I are losing our son, my children are losing their brother. The immediate guilt that I was in the water and it was my fault,” Mr. Miller said. “Somehow he slipped in without us hearing. My wife said you’d think people who are drowning would thrash around and scream for help but drowning is a pretty silent killer. No one can hear you under water.”

Nearly a year after the near-drowning, the Millers are still dealing with the terror they felt that day. Mrs. Miller declines interviews. “She still gets choked up,” Mr. Miller said.

Mr. Miller speaks at public events about the event.

“If I can help one person to not go through that feeling that my wife and I were feeling, then it’s worth it,” he said.

What you can do

Local first responders offer an array of free literature and devices to help prevent drownings. Members of the QCFD have gone door-to-door accompanied by Mayor Gail Barney to educate residents about the importance of water safety, Ron Knight, interim fire chief for QCFD, said.

“So far in 2013, we’ve had two near-drowning events, both involving backyard pools. Fortunately, they both had good outcomes but education is a part of prevention,” Chief Knight said by phone last week. “We went out on a Saturday and targeted neighborhoods with engine companies. Mayor Barney came with us.”

Since April 6, QCFD has distributed more than 450 pouches containing water-safety information. Additional packets are available at the fire stations. QCFD has two locations: fire station No. 411 is at 22407 S. Ellsworth Road and fire Station No. 412 is at 24787 S. Sossaman Road. The AJFD administration office is at 565 N. Idaho Road. For fire station locations, visit www.ajfire.org.

AJFD and RMFD also offer similar packets that include a Water Watchers bracelet with whistle and a tag for the designated Water Watcher to wear. For Rural/Metro fire station locations, visit www.ruralmetro.com.

Water Watchers is a national program in which a responsible adult is designated to supervise children’s water activities. The Water Watcher must be capable of rescuing a drowning child, Ms. Gerola said. She recounted an incident in which a Mesa mother, who was the designated Water Watcher, died because she did not know how to swim. She drowned when she tried to jump in the water to save a child.

Ms. Gerola also warns people not to use floaties or swim rings as life-saving devices.

“Anything inflatable is a toy. Children slip out of those things,” she said. Instead, she recommends children wear a U.S. Coast Guard-approved vest in the appropriate size at all times, especially when they are out of the water. That will help prevent a possible drowning if the child should fall in the water.

David Tait, owner of EVO Swim School in Queen Creek, recommends parents help their children become comfortable in the water at an early age and with adult supervision.

“When children are 6 months to a year, being in the water is a good bonding experience between the child and their parent, but at that age they don’t learn a whole lot more than general comfort in the water,” Mr. Tait said by phone last week. “At a year to 20 months, they can kick and control their mouths so they’re not swallowing or choking on water.”

The biggest deterrent to a child learning to swim is fear of the water, which they can learn from an adult, he said.

“A parent that always shields their child’s face from the water is doing that child a disservice. It makes them uncomfortable in the water,” Mr. Tait said. Also, rather than taking a crash course, Mr. Tait recommended children take one or two lessons a week over an extended period of time to help them develop healthy water habits.

AJFD produced the video public service announcement “If Only” that was introduced to the website, www.ajfire.org last week. It features students from Superstition Mountain Elementary in Apache Junction.

It can be viewed alone along with other helpful resources and links.

Other useful websites include: www.waterwatcher.org, www.nationalwatersafetymonth.org/water-safety-tips and childrensafetyzone.com.

Mar 072013
 

PEORIA, AZ – Authorities say a man’s body was pulled from the water at Lake Pleasant on Saturday.

Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Chris Hegstrom identified the victim as 49-year-old Pedro Aguirre Castillo of Peoria.

Hegstrom said Castillo’s body was recovered around 5:40 p.m.

The cause of death is under investigation.

Mar 072013
 

PHOENIX – Authorities say a 4-year-old boy is in stable condition after he was pulled from a backyard pool.

Phoenix fire Capt. Jonathan Jacobs said the near drowning happened around 3:30 p.m. near Pecos Road and 27th Avenue.

Jacobs said the boy was pulled from the pool and a bystander did CPR poolside.

The victim responded to the CPR, throwing up a large amount of water.

When firefighters arrived the child was awake but very lethargic.

He was taken to a Valley hospital in “serious condition” for further evaluation.

Jacobs said the boy responded well to treatment during transport and became more responsive and alert.

His condition improved and he is now listed in “stable” condition.

Jacobs said the incident was not an issue of a lack of barrier or supervision. He said adults were watching the child when he became unresponsive in the pool.

Mar 072013
 

NEEDLES, CA – A weekend boat crash on the Colorado River has injured three people.

The Mohave Daily News of Bullhead City, Ariz. says it happened late Saturday afternoon near Needles, Calif.

Jodi Miller of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department says a 21-foot Day Cruiser was in choppy, busy waters when the skipper looked back to tell his passengers to change positions because the boat was leaning.

Miller says when he turned back around, he couldn’t avoid hitting an anchored boat.

The crash injured two men and a woman on the anchored boat, all from California. Miller says there’s no immediate word on their conditions Tuesday morning.

Miller says alcohol wasn’t believed to be a factor in the crash. Nobody was arrested but the investigation continues.

Mar 072013
 

CPSC data show most child drownings occur in backyard pools; no entrapment deaths since 2008

WASHINGTON “モA new report out today from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission  (CPSC)  reveals that children younger than age 5 represent more than 75 percent of all pool and spa submersion deaths and 78 percent of pool and spa submersion injuries in the United States involving children younger than 15 years of age. Government data also show that African-American and Hispanic children between the ages of 5 and 14 are at a higher risk of drowning.

“Drowning is the leading cause of unintentional death for children between the ages of 1 and 4 and minority children drown in pools at an alarming rate,” said CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum. “The lives of countless children can be saved this summer.  Take simple safety steps today”ヤteach all children to swim, put a fence around all pools, and always watch children in and around the water.” 

CPSC’s Pool Safely campaign is focusing its attention on populations most at risk of drowning: 

  • Children between the ages of 1 and 3 represented 67 percent of reported fatalities and 64 percent of injuries.
  • African American children between the ages of 5 and 19 are six times more likely to drown in pools than white and Hispanic children that age, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.  Data from USA Swimming indicate that 70 percent of African American children and 62 percent of Hispanic children cannot swim, making them more likely to drown.

 

The new CPSC Pool or Spa Submersions: Estimated Injuries and Reported Fatalities, 2013 Report shows annual averages of:

  • 390 pool or spa-related drownings for children younger than 15 with 76 percent (296) of the victims being younger than 5;
  • 5,100 pool or spa-related emergency department-treated submersion injuries for children younger than 15 with 78 percent (4,000) of the injured being younger than 5.

 

CPSC Chairman Tenenbaum presented the annual Submersion and Entrapment reports for 2013 at an event today at the William H. Rumsey Aquatic Center in Washington, D.C.’s Capitol Hill neighborhood. Chairman Tenenbaum was joined by U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (Fla.-23); Suzy DeFrancis, Red Cross Chief Public Affairs Officer, and Katey Taylor, mother of entrapment victim, Abbey Taylor. Jesus Aguirre, Director of the DC Department of Parks and Recreation, welcomed the group to the popular neighborhood pool.

“As we head into summer and families across the country are getting ready to take their kids to the pool, we must remind everyone how important it is to keep a careful watch on our children as they swim and ensure that their pools and spas have proper safety equipment,” said Rep. Wasserman Schultz.  “Working together, we can improve the safety of all pools and spas by increasing the use of layers of protection and promoting uninterrupted supervision to prevent child drowning and entrapment. With government programs like the CPSC’s Pool Safely, people can learn simple steps to take to save lives.”

“Learning how to swim saves lives,” said Suzy DeFrancis, Chief Public Affairs Officer for the American Red Cross. “The American Red Cross encourages all families to enroll in Learn-to-Swim programs by contacting your local pool.” Families can learn about Red Cross programs and find water safety tips by going to redcross.org.

New data from CPSC’s 2013 Submersion Report compile information on reported pool or spa-related drownings between 2008 and 2010 and estimated pool or spa-related injuries from 2010 through 2012 for children younger than 15. The estimated averages for the three-year periods represented show:

  • Residential locations dominated incidents involving victims younger than 5 years of age; 85 percent of the fatalities occurred at residential pools or spas. About 50 percent of the injuries and 73 percent of the fatalities involving children younger than 15 years occurred at a residence.
  • Of the reported pool fatalities for children younger than age 15, about 60 percent (231) occurred in in-ground pools; 15 percent (59) in above-ground pools, and nearly 10 percent (37) in portable pools.
  • There were no reported entrapment fatalities for 2012. The last recorded fatality of a child due to suction entrapment was in 2007.  CPSC received seven reports of entrapment injury incidents during 2012.

 

For the complete reports see: Pool and Spa Submersions 2013 and Circulation/Suction Entrapments 2013. The years for reported injury and fatality statistics differ due to a lag in fatality reporting. 

Mar 072013
 

PHOENIX, AZ – A 2-year-old girl lost her life Thursday night after being found in a backyard pool.

Police identified her on Friday as Karishman Shephard.

Phoenix Fire Department spokesman Chris Ketterer said crews got the call around 6:30 p.m.

When firefighters arrived to the home near 75th Avenue and Thomas Road, they found Shephard unresponsive.

Shephard was transported to the hospital where she later died.

Crews told ABC15 the girl’s grandmother was watching her at the time.

Ketterer said the home does not have a pool fence.

Mar 072013
 
An 8-year-old boy is recovering from a near drowning at a public swimming pool in Marana Sunday.

Northwest Fire District paramedics received a 911 call from lifeguards at the Ora Mae Harn District Park pool, saying the child was breathing but unconscious, said Capt. Adam Goldberg.

He said they believed the boy had been underwater about four minutes.

The child was flown to University Medical Center and was responding well, Goldberg said.

Family members were also at the pool at the time of the incident.

“What is shows us is that even at a community pool where there are lifeguards present, parents cannot let their guard down when their children are in the pool,” he said. “Those lifeguards are watching 50 or 60 kids.”

Mar 072013
 

Yuma, Arizona – One response last week was for a 3 year old who drowned in a backyard pool. Children, 4 years of age and younger, represent the largest number of drowning victims and it is a reminder for anyone responsible for children to never leave them unsupervised around water. With temperatures beginning to approach or pass 100 degrees, people are starting to look to water recreation for relief. Arizona is consistently one of the states with the highest numbers of drowning cases.

You might expect that of California or Florida with many miles of beaches, but this just shows that it doesn’t take an ocean, it could just takes a few inches of water. Infants can drown in as little as one inch of water, and it can happen in “just a few seconds.”  Every year Arizona loses more than a classroom full of children to drowning. There are a few basic steps to reduce the risk of adding to these figures, we call it the ABCs of drowning prevention.

“A” is for Adult supervision. If children are around water, they need constant, responsible, undistracted, adult supervision. Designate a “Water Watcher” whose only responsibility is to watch the children. If that person has to leave the area, someone else takes over or everyone leaves the pool area with them.

“B” is for Barrier fencing. Every pool should be enclosed by a barrier fence at least 4 feet high. It should have a self closing, self latching gate. Pool toys should not be left in the pool, they attract children, and furniture should not be near the exterior fence where it can be used to crawl over.  Pool alarms are also added security.

“C” is for Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR), learn how to perform CPR in the event that the unthinkable does happen. In addition, although we cannot “waterproof” our children, teach them to swim (the City of Yuma’s Parks and Recreation program has many great classes). First responders often hear “It was only a few seconds” or “I thought someone else was watching”.  Do all you can do to prevent drowning (www.preventdrownings.org provides some excellent tips) and have a fun and safe summer.

For more information, or to set up a class, call Mike Erfert at 928-373-4850.

Mar 072013
 

CHANDLER, AZ – A toddler has been taken to the hospital after being pulled from a backyard pool in Chandler Wednesday morning.

Chandler Fire Department spokesman Tom Dwigging said the 3-year-old was found at the bottom of the pool by a parent at a home near Gilbert and Queen Creek roads.

The parent started CPR and the child began crying and was very active, Dwigging said.

Air15 video showed the child being put into an ambulance.

Dwiggins said the child was probably in the pool for one to two minutes.

There was no word on the child’s condition.

Mar 072013
 

PHOENIX (CBS5) –

Authorities have recovered the body of a man who jumped from a 300-foot cliff at Saguaro Lake in the Tonto National Forest Sunday.

The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Officer Christopher Hegstrom said the body of Justin Otto Lee Anderson was found Friday in the area of Sandy Beach where he disappeared.

Multiple witnesses told authorities they saw Anderson hit the water on his back and never resurface around 3 p.m. Sunday.

Search helicopters from the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office and the Arizona Department of Public Safety flew over the area and authorities deployed an underwater search vehicle, which was in use for about one hour until water being released from Mormon Flat Dam was too strong to properly operate it anymore.

Law enforcement authorities said the search continued with the use of a drop camera that they say “is better suited for the environment Anderson is missing in.”