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Nov 042011
 

In the past 10 weeks, Chandler safety officials have respondedto five pediatric drowning incidents, including the death of atleast one child, according to Chandler Fire Chief Jeff Clark. Thecity averages about five drowning or near-drowning calls a year, hesaid in a news release. The recent incidents involved three pools,a bathtub and a neighborhood lake.

“We don’t expect to respond to this many water safety calls duringa typical year, but it is especially troubling to have these happenduring the winter months,” Clark said.

In response, a community-wide drowning prevention campaign is underway. Throughout March, fire department personnel will emphasizepool safety and water awareness to Chandler residents by speakingwith them in a variety of venues, such as grocery stores, parks,schools, homeowner association meetings, and during door-to-doorvisits. On March 26, community volunteers will join firefighters inwalking their neighborhoods and sharing a message of personalresponsibility for preventing child drownings.

Nov 042011
 

One drowning is too many as far as Chandler Fire Chief Jeff Clark is concerned, but five incidents involving children in the first two months of the year is a call to action.

As a result, Chandler Fire Department is undertaking a community-wide effort to educate residents about the importance of direct and constant adult supervision of children around water. In the past 10 weeks in Chandler there have been five incidents involving children and water, resulting in one death. In the other four cases, children nearly drowned.

“Our average yearly total is five and we’ve had five in the first two months of the year alone,” Clark said. “That’s what’s alarming to us. That they’ve occurred in the winter months does not leave very good prospects for the summer if we continue without raising the awareness of the public. It’s the public that’s going to have to help us slow this rate down.”

The main thrust of the Fire Department’s campaign is to emphasize to adults the importance of securing their swimming pools, supervising children around water, teaching children to swim and learning cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).

“If we can get everyone to remember and follow our message, ‘Eye to Eye to Supervise,’ then our campaign will be successful,” Clark said. “Direct adult supervision is the best way to protect children from drowning. If adults keep their focus as they interact with children anywhere around water, we will save lives.”

Fire Department personnel will emphasize pool safety and water awareness throughout March by speaking to residents in a variety of places. On March 26, volunteers will join firefighters in walking the streets of the city with the goal of taking that message to every household.

“We’ve never done anything to this extent,” Clark said. . . . “The challenge during the month of March is to hit everyone in Chandler with this message.”

Nov 042011
 

Authorities say two children were pulled out of a canal in Gilbert Saturday after their father reported them missing.

Gilbert Fire Department spokesman Mike Connor said one of the children was breathing when rescued but the other was not.

Connor said the two boys, ages 5 and 7, went for a bike ride and when they didn’t return for quite some time, their father went to look for them and called police for help around 5:30 p.m.

Their bicycles were found along a canal bank near Pecos and Recker roads and Gilbert firefighters were called to help with the search.

Connor said a person walking along the canal stopped to help and spotted the boys in the water.

Connor said the 5-year-old was breathing after he was pulled from the water, the 7-year-old was not.

Both were taken to Cardon Children’s Hospital in Mesa, the older boy by air.

Connor said it is unknown exactly how long the boys had been in the water.

Oct 042011
 

A 6-year-old boy who was pulled from a Gilbert canal Saturday evening has died, according to officials.

Gilbert police Sgt. William Balafas said Brenan Thomson was pronounced dead at Cardon Children’s Hospital 8:20 p.m. Saturday after he and his younger brother were pulled from the Roosevelt Water Conservation District Canal several hours earlier.

Thomson’s 5-year-old brother, Rylan was also transported to the Mesa hospital and is expected to be OK, according to Balafas.

Mike Connor, with the Gilbert Fire Department, said the two boys went for a bike ride and when they didn’t return for quite some time, their father went to look for them and called police for help around 5:30 p.m.

Their bicycles were found along the canal bank near Pecos and Recker roads and Gilbert firefighters were called to help with the search.

Mike Bunting, a neighbor who lives near the canal, tells ABC15 he heard the boys’ cries for help and spotted them in the water.

“I don’t think they could get out of there. I couldn’t get out of there,” said Bunting, who helped to pull Rylan from the water and also found Brenan’s body upstream. “It was just surreal.”

It is unknown exactly how long the brothers had been in the canal.

“Can’t stop thinking about it. I just feel for the family,” said Bunting’s wife, Denise.

Balafas said an investigation into the incident is ongoing, which is standard practice for drowning cases.

Sep 262011
 

PHOENIX – A 4-year-old Phoenix boy has drowned after being found face-down in a backyard pool.

The Arizona Republic reports Friday that the boy’s mother told firefighters that she started looking for him after he didn’t respond to her calls Thursday evening.

Earlier, he had been playing in the yard with his two older siblings.

The boy’s parents found him in the pool, and he was unresponsive when he was pulled out.

His mother started CPR and called 911.

Firefighters took him to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Sep 262011
 

A 3-year-old boy nearly drowned Saturday night in Phoenix after being in a pool for one to two minutes, the Phoenix Fire Department reported.

When he was pulled out of the water in the 3700 block of Irwin Avenue, he was described as looking “lethargic” and chest compressions were immediately started, according to the Phoenix Fire Department. The boy began breathing normally a short time later.

He was later taken to a local hospital as a precaution.

Sep 262011
 

The 7-year-old Somerton boy who was saved from drowning by his 12-year-old brother and a neighbor Saturday morning is back home and recovering, according to Robby Rodriguez of the Somerton/Cocopah Fire Department.

The two boys had been swimming without adult supervision at the Chaves Apartments complex in the 500 block of Somerton Avenue when the older brother went to their apartment for a drink. When he returned, he spotted the 7-year-old at the bottom of the pool.

A neighbor who was outside heard the older boy screaming and went to see what was happening.

The neighbor and the older boy pulled the boy from the pool. The 7-year-old was unconscious and not breathing. The neighbor administered CPR. When SCFD firefighters arrived at 10:52 a.m., they found the 7-year-old boy being held up by his brother and with pool water coming out of his mouth.

This is the third drowning or near-drowning instance involving children that the SCFD fire department has responded to in recent years, according to Rodriguez. A 14-month-old child drowned in a uncovered cesspool in March 2010, and a 4-year-old girl was pulled from a canal in the area of East Main Canal Bridge on the East Cocopah Indian Reservation in 2008.

“If a parent gives a child permission to use the pool, they must be there to watch the child at all times. It must be done,” Rodriguez said. “We don’t want any more children killed while being unattended.”

SCFD firefighters returned to the same complex later that same day for an unrelated medical call, according to Rodriguez, and observed five more children swimming unattended in the pool.

“That didn’t set well with us. We met with the apartment complex management (Monday morning) and offered to teach a pool safety class to all the residents. It is our job as firefighters to get this information out there so incidents like this don’t keep happening.”

Rodriguez said the SCFD is also proposing a city ordinance that establishes minimum public pool safety requirements. Currently, the city of Somerton code only requires pools to be completely enclosed by a permanent fence, wall or barrier.

The intent of the Ordinance Development Team, he said, is to specify required fence heights, gate types (self-closing), proper signage and appropriate safety devices.

Sep 262011
 

SCOTTSDALE – What exactly does a “near drowning” mean? We hear the term all the time in Arizona, sadly. Often times we’ll tell you paramedics re-established a child’s pulse, and that child is now in critical condition. But what happens to these children after all that?

We met one Scottsdale family going through that very journey, 25 years after their near drowning tragedy.

“One minute one minute and you can’t take it back”ᆭ I ran outside and my dad was pulling my little brother from the pool. He was white, blue lips”ᆭ I never heard my mother scream like that,” recalls Lesia Crawford, Andrew Hill’s sister.

“I remember them putting him back in the ambulance. I remember seeing my dad cry for the first time, I’d never seen my father cry”ᆭ he was just covered in tubes and all sorts of machines”ᆭ you don’t know what to expect but it definitely changes your whole life.”

Andrew was 2 years old when he fell into his parents’ backyard pool. He was able to undo a lock on the door, and there was no fence in place.

He spent about 5 minutes underwater, suffering severe brain damage. Doctors predicted he wouldn’t live long — but Andrew is now a grown man.

“The doctors told us you can take him home to die for Christmas. Here he is 27 years old,” says Lesia.

Andrew is bed-ridden. His hands, legs, and feet are disfigured from no use. He can’t speak, but he can laugh.

The tragedy took a toll on every family member. Andrew’s parents’ marriage didn’t survive. Eventually a step mom entered the picture, admirably stepping into the role of wife, mother, and caregiver.

Terry Hill walks us through a typical day.

“First thing in the morning you have to turn him because he’s been in one position all night”ᆭ he’s allergic to so much the only protein we can give him is chicken or turkey or fish,” she says.

Everything must be pureed because he eats through a feeding tube.

“He gets broccoli and cauliflower that’s been cooked”ᆭ you have to give him so much then stop for a half hour let his stomach process and then give him the rest of his breakfast then you have to let that settle before you start doing percussions which is hitting his chest.”

There are daily breathing treatments, medication, and loads of laundry. And through it all, constant checks on Andrew. He can’t be left alone for more than 15 minutes, except at night.

“It takes two of us to put him to bed for the evening, you have to make sure he’s positioned correctly. Sometimes he’ll get a cramp in his muscles you have to rub it out or you have to hold his head or deal with that through the evening.”

For the Hills — it was never a question of whether to take on the responsibility of constant care for Andrew. But doctors say every family’s situation is different — with every non-fatal drowning — comes a very painful reality.

“We’ll get their heart rate back, blood pressure all of that, but then the hard decisions come about — where is that child going to be next week, five years from now, 10 years from now, 20 years from now,” says Dr. David Beyda, Phoenix Children’s Hospital. “There’s a difference between being alive and having a life.”

This family’s plea: “Pay attention to your children, don’t look away for a second if they’re out playing in the pool you need to play with them,” says Lesia.

Especially those who may be a little more curious and independent.

“Those are the very same traits that are going to draw like a magnet that child to a pool,” says Terry.

“Don’t let that perfectly healthy child of yours turn into a lifetime of suffering for the family and for that child,” says Lesia.

So far this year 96 people have suffered injuries or have died in water related incidents. Doctors say anyone underwater for at least 5 minutes will likely suffer significant brain damage.

Sep 262011
 

QUEEN CREEK, Ariz. – A baby girl was found unresponsive in a bathtub at a home in Queen Creek near the Hunt Highway and Arizona Farms Road Wednesday afternoon.

The child, just 8-months-old, was blue in color, wasn’t breathing and had gone into cardiac arrest.

According to Rural Metro crews, she was found by her mother, who then grabbed the girl, ran to a neighbor’s home and called 911.

The girl was given CPR and rushed to Banner Ironwood Hospital in extremely critical condition. On the way, EMTs were able to establish a faint pulse.

The baby was then air lifted to Cardon Children’s Center in Mesa. Doctors have not been able to stablize her, and she is not breathing on her own. As of 3:30 p.m., doctors have not been able to detect any brain activity.

We’re told family members are now gathered around her at the hospital, saying their goodbyes. Doctors are required to wait 24 hours before declaring a patient brain dead.

The mother claims the girl was in the tub for a few seconds. She claims that she turned away to grab a towel and the child was floating face down.

The mother in this case has been identified as Patricia Schettler. Her daughter is named Chevelle Schettler.

The Pinal County Sheriff’s Office is investigating.

Sep 262011
 

As a parent, I often find myself guilty of the “do as I say, not as I do” trick. I confess to telling my kids how important it is to get a good night’s sleep, but I sometimes stay up late watching TV myself. I talk about how important it is to be prepared for a school day, but forget to plan for my own day at work. And, I tell them to try new things, but I sometimes stay with what’s comfortable.

Developing our new parent program, “Playing it Safe,” has been a challenge for me. Existing programs are easy, mostly. New ideas mean taking risks, planning for the unexpected, stretching my wings.

“What if it fails?” I ask myself. “What if no one will participate?”

We started more than a year ago with research, then developed and piloted the program, and now we’re offering it to the community. I told myself to be brave and take chances. And it’s gotten a great reception “モ there are plenty of requests from the community, and after every single session I get positive feedback and a good feeling that I’m making a difference.

One of the most surprising things I’ve learned from talking to parents is just how many adults do not know how to swim.

This is not something people admit when they first speak to a stranger, and maybe that’s why I haven’t heard it spoken of, until now. When we talk about drowning prevention in small groups, we share our stories and solutions, and begin to get to know each other, and that’s when a parent feels comfortable enough to mention it. I’d estimate that one or two out of every 10 parents I speak with can’t swim.

A tragic case in Glendale recently illustrates how important it is for adults to talk about this subject. Last month, a 37-year-old mother jumped into her pool because she thought her 5-year-old son needed to be rescued. She could not swim, and by the time she was rescued, her injuries were so severe that she ultimately died.

We always include supervision when we talk about drowning prevention. But I’m urging parents to take a hard look at who can be their “Water Watcher.” Children need constant, capable supervision when they are near the water. “Capable” means old enough to supervise, sober, aware of who is in charge, able to give CPR and able to swim.

My grandmother did not know how to swim, and never learned. She missed out on the simple pleasure of kicking across the pool on a hot summer day, and was not as safe around the pool as she could have been.

It’s awfully hot out there right now, folks. Don’t stay up too late watching TV on these sweltering summer nights and prepare ahead of time for your work day. Also, try something new, and if you don’t know how to swim, I think you know exactly where to start.

  • Tiffaney Isaacson is the water safety coordinator for Water Watchers at Phoenix Children’s Hospital. Reach her at (602) 546-1712.