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Mar 242012
 

PHOENIX – Phoenix firefighters say a 1-year-old girl was pulled from a Phoenix swimming pool Friday night.

Jorge Enriquez of the Phoenix Fire Department said the girl was found floating at the top of the pool near 37th avenue and Bell.

Enriquez said the little girl’s father was in the back yard working on an air conditioning unit when he noticed something floating at the top of the pool.

When he went to investigate, he realized it was his 1-year-old toddler.

Firefighters say he pulled her from the pool and performed CPR until firefighters arrived.

The girl’s mother and other children were also home at the time.

The child was lifeless and not breathing when she was transported to Banner Thunderbird Hospital.

Her condition is extremely critical.

Firefighters say the house did not have a pool fence.

Neighbors tell ABC15 that they believe today might have been the girl’s birthday but firefighters could not confirm that at this time.

Mar 242012
 

GILBERT – A 3-year old child has been pulled from a backyard pool in Gilbert and flown to Phoenix Children’s Hospital.

Firefighters tell us the boy was outside with his family near Germann and Power when he slipped off his floaties and then somehow got into the pool.

His family spotted him about a minute later and pulled him from the water.

He was not breathing — but a family member started CPR.

By the time paramedics arrived the boy was coughing up water and is expected to survive.

Mar 162012
 

CHANDLER, AZ – A Chandler mom is credited with saving her 2-year-old daughter from nearly drowning Wednesday afternoon.

Initial reports indicate the woman found the toddler in the backyard pool of their home near Elliot Road and Loop 101.

Chandler Fire Department spokesman Brad Miller said the woman performed CPR on her daughter until crews arrived. When firefighters got to the home the girl was reportedly alert and crying.

The child was transported to a local hospital for evaluation.

Firefighters are unsure how long the girl had been in the pool.

Mar 162012
 

PHOENIX – A 16-month-old boy has died after being pulled from a backyard pool Sunday afternoon.

According to Jorge Enriquez with the Phoenix Fire Department, the boy wandered in to the backyard of his home near 35th Avenue and McDowell.

The boy’s mother walked outside to take out the trash and found the boy floating at the top of the pool.

The mother got the boy out of the pool and a friend performed CPR.

The boy was taken to hospital where he later died.

Phoenix Police department spokesperson James Holmes is describing this as a “terrible tragedy, but accidental.”

Officials say the family did not have a lock or safety gate around the pool.

Mar 162012
 

PHOENIX — A body was found in a Phoenix canal Friday morning.

A passerby found the man’s body trapped against a grate in the Highline Canal near Seventh Street and Baseline Road.

The unidentified man is believed to be about 60 years old.

At this time, police do not know how long the body was in the water.

Police said there are no indications of foul play and are awaiting autopsy results to determine the cause of death.

Mar 162012
 

PHOENIX – A young boy was taken to the hospital Saturday after he was pulled from a lake at a south Phoenix park with no heartbeat.

Phoenix fire spokesman Scott McDonald said it appeared the 3-year-old was at a party with his family at Cesar Chavez Park near 35th Avenue and Baseline Road when he wandered away.

McDonald said the boy’s mother found him at the bottom of the lagoon in a shallow section.

Witnesses say he was not breathing and lifeless. He was pulled out of the water by his mother.

Bystanders gave the boy CPR at the scene. Gilbert Acosta was one of the first responders. He said he gave the 3-year-old mouth-to-mouth; blowing air into the boy’s lungs as another woman pumped the child’s chest to get his heart going.

“He had no pulse, he had nothing. He was gone,” Acosta said.

“Just before I started the CPR I did a quick prayer and said, God, give me the strength to help him.”

Acosta said five long minutes went by, and then the child began to cough, and start to breathe again, crying loudly. Acosta brought the child back to life.

An ambulance took the toddler to the hospital. He was released Sunday morning.

Acosta visited him at the hospital and said the little guy was acting like nothing even happened to him.

“His mom was just crying and hugging me saying, “You my angel. Thank you for what you did,” ” Acosta recalled. “I just happened to be at the right place at the right time.”

McDonald said the park was crowded and the family told him they lost track of the boy from the playground for up to five minutes.

The boy is expected to be fine.

Mar 162012
 

Eric Robinette may be a 16-year-old boy every other day of the week, but on Thursdays he’s a shark.

That’s when he goes to Hubbard Family Swim School for lessons, a routine he’s kept up for more than a decade. Since starting at age 5, he’s progressed to “hammerhead,” the school’s program for advanced swimmers.

Eric has moderate to severe autism, a developmental disorder often manifesting itself in difficulty with communication or social skills and repetitive behaviors. Helping him learn to be comfortable in water was a concern for his family. After a failed attempt with a private instructor at home, Eric’s family found Hubbard.

So far the experience has been nothing but positive.

“He likes to swim, he likes his teachers, he likes all his awards,” said Liz Ellertson, a family friend who takes Eric to his lessons.

Eric’s story is one Hubbard hopes to duplicate. In that spirit, the school this year started an Autism Family Swim on the fourth Saturday of every month. Parents are encouraged to bring autistic children to the Hubbard’s Mesa branch at Riverview off Dobson Road and Loop 202 and spend time in their two heated pools.

This month’s swim is the second since the program started and will be from 2:30-4:30 p.m. Saturday and costs $5 per family.

Bob Hubbard, the school’s co-owner, said one reason for the family swim is because parents often might not know their own child’s capabilities. Water provides an instant, all encompassing sensory feedback that many, especially autistic, children find soothing, he said.

“We just feel that kids with autism and water are a good mix,” school co-owner Bob Hubbard said.

The one lesson Hubbard learned since starting the school is never to put expectations on a child, he said. In addition to the work with autistic children, the school has helped kids with cerebral palsy, blindness or missing limbs swim as well as anyone.

“The rewarding thing is having a parent cry on your pool deck when their child accomplishes something impossible,” Hubbard said.

The school focuses on levels, colorfully named after animals such as tadpole, jellyfish or lobster, that set baselines for how comfortable a child is in the water and what skills they’ve acquired. For example, once a child is comfortable enough to get into the pool without crying, open their eyes underwater, and exit the pool by themselves, they can graduate from “tadpole” to “goldfish.”

Hubbard and his wife, Kathy, first opened their school in October 1999. The business now includes locations in Phoenix, Peoria and Mesa and teaches about 4,000 children. The three schools teach a combined total of about 75 special-needs children a week.

Despite the number of students, Hubbard stressed that 90 percent of the teaching is still one-on-one. All special-needs children start off with individual lessons and, depending on progress, might join the mainstream programs. Even then, instructors will only teach up to four children at a time, he said.

“Every child’s half hour is their half hour,” Hubbard said.

Patricia Fuller’s son, David, gets that half hour every Friday and Saturday.

David, 7, has high-functioning autism and started attending Hubbard a year and a half ago. Fuller had searched for a place specializing in teaching special-needs children. David’s school had no suggestions for her. She ran across Hubbard while taking David to a play center next door.

Since discovering Hubbard, Fuller has sent fliers to her son’s school, reached out to other parents and praised the school on Facebook, she said.

Fuller said since joining she’s been impressed with the staff’s dealings with autistic children like David. The school’s habit of giving out ribbons and other prizes as kids advance through the levels is also something autistic children like David respond well to, she said.

“He loves it — capital “L” — loves it,” Fuller said.

Mar 162012
 

Lana Whitehead believes in miracles. But sometimes, she says, you have to make them yourself.

In December 2005, her grandson, Blake, was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. For three months he underwent treatments for the disease in Mesa at what is now known as Cardon Children’s Medical Center.

For all but one week, the family lived at the hospital.

Whitehead sat with the young boy – just shy of 2 years old – and prayed for a miracle.

“I really believed we were going to get a miracle. You have to believe that.”

On March 8, 2006, Blake passed away with his parents, Brandon and Kelle Whitehead, by his side.

“I decided we would make him that miracle,” Lana Whitehead says.

The Whitehead family created the Blake’s Miracle Foundation. Each year since Blake’s death, the family – which owns and operates Mesa’s SWIMkids USA – has put on the Swim-kid-athon to raise funds for the foundation.

Through the efforts, the community has given nearly $200,000 to Cardon Children’s Medical Center to pay for alternative pain therapies for children, such as music therapy, and toys for children going through treatments. The organization even paid for a treatment room at the hospital and is now raising money for drowning prevention.

Through Blake’s Miracle and the work of the National Drowning Prevention Alliance – as well as its Arizona coalition – doctors are beginning to write “prescriptions” for swim lessons for kids at 9 and 12 months, Whitehead says. It’s raising more awareness of the need for swimming lessons, supervision around a pool, CPR training and pool fences.

“Kim Burgess (executive director of the national group) asked me to write a position paper,” about drowning prevention, Lana Whitehead says. That led to the creation of Water Smart Babies (watersmartbabies.com) and work with the Broward County (Fla.) Drowning Prevention Task Force. That county, along with Maricopa County, has some of the highest drowning rates in the U.S.

Lana Whitehead wants to see more done nationally with drowning prevention and locally with pain management for ill children.

Each year, Lana Whitehead says, the annual swim-a-thon has gotten bigger, with more and more participants. It now includes a silent auction, business expos, “more bounce houses than you can count,” and a raffle.

But with the economy, last year – the biggest yet – drew in the fewest dollars.

“People are not giving as much,” Whitehead said, recognizing the troubles many residents are having. “Banner says that, too. They need that money for pain management. This helps to pay for music therapy. … Think about how boring it is to sit in bed for a child. The music therapist comes in with bells, sings to them. The older kids get to make CDs and put on shows. Think how much that means to a parent when that child passes away.”

Whitehead wants more kids to feel relief from their pain while they’re being treated for terminal illnesses – relief that doesn’t require them to be in a narcotics daze for days on end, she said.

For many kids, the alternative pain management is a “miracle” when they’re too young to understand what’s going on to them.

“That’s what we wanted to give (Blake). What more can we do for him than make this miracle?”

The next event will be held March 3. Children do not have to be members of SWIMkids USA to participate. For information, see blakesmiracle.org.

Contact writer: (480) 898-6549 or mreese@evtrib.com

Mar 162012
 

TEMPE, Ariz. – It was a close call for a mother whose infants’ stroller rolled into a pond on Saturday in Tempe.

A mother was out jogging with her twin 1-year-old boys, who were in a jogging stroller, in a grassy area near a pond “モ close to Rural and Baseline.

The mom stopped to pick a lemon from a tree, not realizing that the stroller was on a slight incline, according to Tempe fire spokesman Mike Reichling.

The stroller rolled into the pond, and the mom ran and pulled the stroller — with the twins still strapped in — out of the pond, Reichling said.

She went to a nearby home for help.

Reichling said the boys were transported to a local hospital as a precaution but are expected to be OK.

Jan 042012
 

PHOENIX – Who says there’s nothing good on TV anymore? A young brother and sister used what they learned on TV to save the life of their 2-year-old cousin.

At their Phoenix home Tuesday, 11-year-old Keanu Moreno and his 9-year-old sister, Demi found their little cousin at the bottom of their pool in the backyard. The toddler was drowning.

“I dived in and I got him and I put him right on my shoulder,” Keanu said. “Then I swam to the top and put him on the floor.”

Keanu and Dime’s cousin, 2-year-old Alessandro had snuck outside an open door when no one was looking.

Laying unconscious on the ground near the pool, Alessandro’s skin had turned purple. He was not breathing and Dime said his eyes were wide-open.

“I was really scared,” Keanu said. “I thought he was dead. I really did, but I wanted him to be alive.”

“I was saying, God please help him. Please don’t let him die,” Demi recalled.

Thinking back to what they had watched on the Discovery Channel and Animal Planet, Demi and Keanu jumped into action. Demi dialed 911 while big brother Keanu started CPR.

“I blew into his mouth, and then I went like this really, really hard,” Keanu said demonstrating how he performed the chest compressions on Alessandro. “He started throwing up all of that stuff.”

Keanu said he only had to do CPR for “about 10 seconds,” but because of how scared he was, “it felt like 20 minutes.”

An ambulance soon arrived and took Alessandro to the hospital where paramedics say he is doing just fine.

The children were being supervised by older teenage relatives at the time.

Ironically, Tuesday was the start of “Water Safety Day” in the Valley.

Captain Scott McDonald of the Phoenix Fire Department said the close call at the Moreno’s house was a fitting kick-off, and a reminder of the importance of keeping watch over children when there is a pool nearby.

“We have an incredible outcome to what could have been a very devastating, tragic event,” Capt. McDonald said. “Keanu and Demi did a great job.”