sos

fw_eno

Feb 052011
 

PHOENIX – Fire officials say a toddler has been transported to a hospital after a near-drowning in north Phoenix.

According to Phoenix fire spokesman Scott Walker, the 18-month-old girl was underwater for two minutes and was not breathing around 5 p.m. at a home near Thunderbird Road and Interstate 17.

She has a heartbeat as of 6:30 p.m., but she’s not breathing on her own, Walker said.

He said it’s believed the girl went through a doggie door and into a swimming pool that hasn’t been cleaned in some time.

Several family members were inside the home and pulled the girl out of the pool when they found out what happened, Walker said. The girl did not live at the home.

The girl is at St. Joseph’s Hospital and her condition is unknown at this time.

Check back for updates.

Feb 052011
 

As temperatures begin to creep into triple-digits, East Valley residents “ヤ both young and old “ヤ will become common fixtures at public and neighborhood watering holes.

With swimming pools becoming popular attractions so rises opportunities for dangers of drowning, East Valley fire department and district officials contend.

On average, year-to-date tallies of water-related incidents are in tune with previous years, but those numbers often reflect 12 months, not the first three of the year, officials say.

According to the Drowning Prevention Coalition of Arizona, there have been 18 water-related including drowning and near-drowning instances in Maricopa County with eight deaths including two children.

The Apache Junction Fire District and Queen Creek Fire Department have not reported any water-related incidents as of March 31, according to department officials.

The ABCs of drowning prevention “ヤ a common mantra taught among East Valley fire and ambulance entities “ヤ hinges on adult supervision, barriers and CPR classes, public safety officials say.

Barriers created and the attending of CPR classes are good ways to be proactive, but the most effective manner to prevent child drowning remains adult supervision, they say.

One mother’s tragedy
An East Valley mother, who lost her 2-year-old daughter seven years ago in a drowning incident, agreed to sit down with the Independent to tell her story so others might learn from the tragedy she endured.
This is her story:

On June 26, 2004 Corrie Simzyk of Apache Junction was enjoying a family barbecue celebrating an eighth-grade graduation.

“We just put our pool up a week prior,” she said March 30 at her Apache Junction residence. “Just like any family, we were just doing a barbecue and enjoying the day.”

With a host of family to entertain, Ms. Simzyk recalls having to go out to a local convenience store midway through the barbecue in need of grilling condiments.

“When I left everybody was inside eating hamburgers or hot dogs,” she recalled. “We were kind of detained there, but when I got home, I put down the groceries and asked, “リHas anyone seen Morgan?'”

Not immediately finding her 2-year-old daughter amongst family inside, Ms. Simzyk says she ran outside heading to the newly constructed, above-ground pool.

“I instantly ran outside and found her floating,” she said of her daughter’s lifeless body.

The scene unfolded rapidly, Ms. Simzyk says.

“Both I and my brother-in-law jumped in the pool and we both pulled her out,” she said as her voice cracked recalling the tragedy. “Like any mother I just pushed everyone away and started doing CPR.”

Ms. Simzyk estimates she was gone about 10 or 15 minutes at the convenience store because she was being asked about a neighborhood boy who was known for stowing away in patron vehicles.

“They were just simple questions,” she said of the police officer’s questions in reference to the at-risk youngster. She said the boy was trying to avoid going home.

Upon discovery of Morgan, 9-1-1 calls were placed, with the Mesa Police Department the first to respond, Ms. Simzyk says. The drowning occurred when she lived in east Mesa.

“He was the first responder and I know he felt guilty,” she said of the officer who detained her at the local convenience store. “He took the passing of Morgan very personally.”

Within hours of the 9-1-1 call Morgan was pronounced dead at the hospital.

No barriers between water and child and a lack of adult supervision resulted in the needless death of a 2-year-old girl, Ms. Simzyk says.

“After it happened, that night, I couldn’t go to the house,” she said of the grief and confusion following the tragedy. “I didn’t even want to get out of bed.”

While moments of perseverance emerged, Ms. Simzyk says for years she really didn’t say much.

“The first year, I didn’t really want to talk with anyone. I just felt like I wanted to deal with this in my own way and my own time,” she said. “Since losing her and even from the time Morgan was placed in my life she gave me the strength to move on.”

Through support groups and the love and support of her family, Ms. Simzyk was slowly beginning to participate in the grieving process, she says of the first two years following the tragedy.

“I just felt like my family was falling apart,” she said of the eventual dissolution of her first marriage. “I think in my mind, it has made me a stronger person.”

Thinking back on that day and putting feelings of angst behind her, Ms. Simzyk says Morgan was a little girl that took the initiative.

“We would go to the mall and she would say, “リhi’ to anyone that passed by,” she recalled of fond memories with Morgan. “She had a lot of spirit … what a happy little girl she was.”

Evolving from shuttering from the outside world to an active volunteer with the Water Watchers “ヤ a drowning prevention program of the Phoenix Children’s Hospital “ヤ Ms. Simzyk says the last five years have taught her a lot.

“About five years ago the Phoenix Children’s Hospital contacted me, but at that time I wanted to hold her memories in,” she said of her immediate resistance to sharing Morgan’s story.

But as time went on, Ms. Simzyk says she has learned to share Morgan’s story to help minimize the chances of her tragedy being experienced by others.

“Even today when I go through the albums I don’t want to put new photos in because once they’re done I have to close that book and I don’t want to close that book,” she said. “Now, I look forward to talking about it.”
Although it took years, Ms. Simzyk says one instant in her life immediately following the tragedy let her know Morgan’s death ought not to be in vain.

“Why do you have to do this milestone right now?” she said of the questions she silently asked her then 14-month-old son Zane after taking his first steps the day after Morgan’s drowning. “I think it was that. Seeing him was what made me realize that I can’t shut the world out.”

Adult supervision
When it comes to avoiding child drowning, adult supervision trumps all other efforts, East Valley public safety officials agree.

“Just that leaving them alone for a second around any body of water,” Tina Gerola, Apache Junction Fire District fire and life-safety specialist, explained in a March 29 phone interview. “The last drowning we had here was in the bathtub.”

It only takes a few seconds for a child “ヤ infant, toddler or school age “ヤ to drown, Ms. Gerola says.
“That seems to be the common denominator. You can have every barrier and take CPR classes, but if it’s too late we cannot stress enough that you cannot take your eyes off of your children.”

Most child drowning incidents occur with more than one adult around, Ms. Gerola points out.

“I have to tell you, in my opinion, this is the most preventable death there is,” she said of what she has told family members of drowning victims. “This is preventable.”

Never assume someone else is diligently watching your child, Mr. Gerola warns.

“We can’t assume that anyone is watching,” she said. “It is preventable, but it is very easy for it to happen.”
There are no warning signs and often once you realize your child is submerged, precious minutes have already passed, according to Ms. Gerola.

“Let me tell you, drowning is silent. There is no sound to it. When a baby falls in it is just silent,” she said. “We just can’t stress that enough.”

Barriers
According to Chandler Fire Capt. Jason White, in the city of Chandler “we are in a crisis situation.”

“In a typical year, we have five child-drowning incidents, but only three months in we have had six and we don’t know why,” he said at the March 29 Water Safety Day hosted by the Chandler-Gilbert Community College.
Chandler-Gilbert Community College is at 2626 E. Pecos Road in Chandler.

When asked why the sudden uptick to drowning incidents within Chandler city limits, Capt. White replied, “There is not an exact answer, but it has to stop.”

Stopping child-drowning incidents in any community is a multi-faceted effort, Capt. White says.

“All of our drowning (incidents) have been in pools with adults around in each of them. Each incident involved a child within his or her own pool,” he said of the two call outs he responded to.

A fence around a pool or a specially designed pool cover are great deterrents to child-drowning incidents, but not the answer, Capt. White says.

“That is a big step for so many “ヤ it’s a great deterrent, but a lot of people have a false sense of security,” he said of their need, but also a barrier’s crutch.

While barriers are essential they are a step below consistent adult supervision, according to Gilbert Fire Capt. Mark Justus.

“The barriers are important, but it is a step below supervision,” he said at the March 29 Water Safety Day. “In most drowning incidents there was an adult in the area but they were preoccupied.”

Barriers are only a part of the overall life-saving education effort, Capt. Justus says.

“To me, it is eye-to-eye contact with your child,” he said. “A lot of people think the job is done once they are proficient swimmers, but that does not ensure they can self-rescue.”

Stopping child-drowning incidents has to be a group effort, Capt. Justus contends.

“I think it is preventable, but it takes a community effort by the entire neighborhood,” he said. “It’s either speaking up or doing something they know should be done.”

Classes
Queen Creek Fire Marshal Jon Spezzacatena says CPR and swim lessons are classes everyone should take at some point in their lives.

He also says skills learned in those classes could mean life and death.

“It only takes a couple of seconds for (children) to drown,” he said at the March 29 Water Safety Day. “If you do know what to do it is going to give them a lot better chance of surviving a drowning.”

Depending on water temperature, it takes about four minutes for a human brain to begin getting damaged from a lack of oxygen, according to Fire Marshal Spezzacatena.

“You are looking at anywhere between four to six minutes, but after that, the brain starts to get damaged,” he said. “You just keep doing it until someone with a higher medical expertise arrives.”

CPR has changed in the last 24 months with only compressions administered without breaks to force oxygen through the mouth, Fire Marshal Spezzacatena explains.

“What they are finding out is that if you stop compressions you lose all the priming because the heart is like a pump,” he pointed out. “If you keep the pump going it is going to allow oxygen to get into the lungs.”

The American Heart Association in 2011 released new guidelines for all CPR techniques, according to Fire Marshal Spezzacatena.

Mesa Fire and Life-Safety Specialist Michelle Long says the common theme throughout child-drowning incidents is a lack of parent supervision and a lack of understanding what to do if an emergency happens.

“It can happen to anyone at anytime,” she said at the March 29 Water Safety Day. “The biggest misconception is they (the parents) think someone else is watching the kids “ヤ that is the common denominator through all of this.”
Education is key because drowning incidents have no socioeconomic boundary to overcome, Ms. Long says.

“It doesn’t matter what your income is or what neighborhood you live in,” she said of the universal danger. “But this is not bad parenting “ヤ you can’t point fingers.”

Educating yourself is paramount in helping put more distance between your child and a dangerous situation with a body of water.
“It makes sense when you have layers in place,” she said. “What it comes down to is having barriers between water and child, but it is preventable.”

Sidebars:

The ABCs of water safety
“ᄁA is for adult supervision, which is critical to preventing drownings. Children who have access to water should have eye-to-eye contact with adults, and adults should never leave children alone around water.
“ᄁB is for barriers, which include fences and door locks restricting children’s access to water, acting as a second line of defense.
“ᄁC is for classes that adults should take to learn current CPR training. Children should also have swimming lessons at the appropriate age.
Source: Water Safety Day pamphlet

Safety tips
“ᄁNever leave a child unsupervised in the tub
“ᄁBath seats are not safety devices. They do not make children safer in the tub.
“ᄁBefore filling the tub, make sure you have everything you might need during bathtime including towels, shampoo, telephone and clothing.
Source: Water Safety Day pamphlet

Drowning facts
“ᄁChild drownings are swift and silent. In as little as two minutes, a child will lose consciousness in the water. Neurological injury occurs within four to six minutes.
“ᄁIn Maricopa County alone, an average of four bathtub drowning incidents occur per year, with an average of one per year being fatal.
“ᄁMore than half of drownings among infants (under the age of 1) occur in bathtubs; the majority occur in the absence of adult supervision.
“ᄁFemales have a bathtub drowning rate twice that of males.
“ᄁIn at least 29 of the 292 bathtub drowning deaths reported to CPSC between 1996 and 1999, the victims were using bath seats.
“ᄁChildren can drown in an inch or two of water.
Source: Water Safety Day pamphlet

Want to know more?
For more information on water safety facts and drowning prevention efforts, events and techniques go to the Drowning Prevention Coalition of Arizona’s website at http://www.preventdrownings.org.

East Valley water safety events/efforts
“ᄁ10 a.m. April, 16 Apache Junction Parks and Recreation Department hosts a day of water-safety activities at the Superstition Shadows Aquatic Center, 1090 W. Southern Ave. in Apache Junction.
“ᄁChandler drowning awareness campaign needs volunteers to deliver drowning awareness campaign materials to approximately 18,000 homes in Chandler. Call 480-782-2122.
“ᄁApril 30 Walk for Water Safety where East Valley officials hope to have residents distribute water safety and drowning prevention information in local neighborhoods. Call 480-412-3306.

Nov 292010
 

The Glendale Fire Department says a16-month-old girl remains in critical condition Monday after shewas found floating in a swimming pool.

Paramedics responded to a residence near 51st and Olive AvenuesSaturday evening on a child drowning call. Rescuers found an adultperforming CPR on the child.

The little girl was stabilized and transported to BannerThunderbird Hospital.

Investigators think the child followed the family dog through adoggie door and into the backyard. Several minutes later, she wasfound in the pool by adults.

Although swimming season is over, the fire department asksparents to continue watching their children around water, evenduring the winter months.

Nov 292010
 

Most of the time when we report on drownings and near drownings, it’s because a child somehow found their way into a pool.

But on Monday, paramedics were called to a home in Mesa after a child nearly drowned in the home’s bathroom – not in the bathtub though. The little girl fell into the toilet.

The Mesa Fire Department and Cardon Children’s Hospital are using this case as a chance to remind people to take a look around their home and see if there’s something you could be doing to make your child safer.

A hospital is the very last place anyone wants to have to rush to, but a frantic father found himself there with his daughter.

“It doesn’t all come back to swimming pools and canals..again it can be a bucket of water and a toilet,” said Mesa Fire Dept. Captain Forrest Smith.

The little girl is okay, but it’s a reminder to all of us, especially parents, that your house can be a danger zone in ways you never imagined.

On Monday morning in Mesa, the toilet turned out to be danger to a 1-year-old found face first in the toilet bowl.

“With the little kids their heads are huge..they’re so heavy their neck muscles are weak, so once a kid gets his head down, they can’t get back up,” said Smith.

A popular way of childproofing is to for people to get on their hands and knees and crawl through their homes, giving them a child’s eye view. You may see dangers down there you would otherwise miss.

“Watch Your Children Around Water” – it’s a lesson FOX 10’s Dave Munsey has been repeating for years. Take a look at this video as he explains how it can happen in things like buckets and toilets.

Nov 292010
 

A 10-year-old boy was taken to a local hospital this eveningafter he nearly drowned in swimming pool at the Omni TucsonNational Resort on the northwest side, authorities said.

Authorities were called to the resort, near North Shannon and WestMagee roads, after receiving a report of a boy falling into thepool, said Deputy Jason Ogan, a Pima County Sheriff’s Departmentspokesman.

The boy was alert and breathing when he was taken to the hospital,Ogan said.

Nov 292010
 

A 12-year-old boy was expected to recover after nearly drowning Wednesday night in the pool at the Southwest Valley Family YMCA in Goodyear, authorities said.

The boy was swimming in the lap pool with a friend about 8:30 p.m. when he lost consciousness, Goodyear fire spokesman Russ Braden said. His friend called for help and a bystander and on-duty lifeguard pulled the boy from the water.

He was unconscious but began spitting up water after the lifeguard performed CPR and other life-saving measures, Braden said. He was conscious and talking by the time firefighters arrived two minutes after receiving the call.

The boy was taken to Phoenix Children’s Hospital as a precaution, he said.

Braden said people should never hesitate to call 911 if something happens, even if the child seems OK.

“They will go from looking pretty good to looking bad within minutes, so that’s why with kids we always (advise) to take them in,” he said.

It was unclear why the boy lost consciousness, Braden said.

A statement released by the Ed Hendricks, executive vice president of Valley of the Sun YMCA, on Thursday said, “We are proud of our lifeguards and staff who responded to the emergency situation, administered care and supported the family. Safety is our number one priority.”

Nov 292010
 

A toddler nearly drowned at his home in Phoenix on Monday afternoon when he crawled out of his family home’s doggy door and into the pool.

The 18-month-old was coughing up water after making it into the pool at his home near Thunderbird Road and 40th Street about 2:30 p.m. He was taken to a local hospital in case he had water in his lungs, according to Deputy Frank Salomon with the Phoenix Fire Department.

“This happens a lot,” Salomon said. “Parents forget that (doggy doors) are an avenue for kids crawling around and they forget to properly secure the house.”

Nov 292010
 

An infant remains in extremely critical condition after nearly drowning in a bathtub at an East Valley home Wednesday night.

MesaFire Department spokesman Forrest Smith said crews were called to theGold Canyon residence near Don Donnelly Trail and Superstition MountainDrive around 7:15 p.m. after the girl’s mother found her unresponsivein the tub.

Tim Gaffney, with Pinal County Sheriff’s Office,said the woman left the 11-month-old and her 3-year-old sister in thetub together while she went to the bedroom to get their pajamas. Whenshe returned, she reportedly found the infant floating face down in thewater.

A neighbor went to the family’s home after hearing screams and performed CPR on the 11-month-old until emergency crews arrived.

Smithsaid the girl wasn’t breathing and was without a pulse when medicalpersonnel got to the scene, but crews were able to regain a pulsebefore the infant was transported to Cardon Children’s Medical Center.

Gaffney said Thursday the young girl is still listed in extremely critical condition at the Mesa hospital.

The incident is reportedly being investigated as a tragic accident.

Nov 292010
 

Authorities say a 73-year-old woman has been found dead in her pool in northwest Phoenix.

Phoenix Fire Department emergency crewsresponded to a drowning call Monday night near 43rd Avenue and UnionHills Drive to find the unidentified woman already dead in the pool.

The Arizona Republic says a neighbor orfriend told authorities they tried to reach the woman all day long butwere unsuccessful.

The name of the victim hasn’t been released yet. Phoenix police are investigating the woman’s death.

Nov 292010
 

Fire officials say a 19-month-old girl is in critical condition Tuesday afternoon after a drowning call in Gilbert.

TheGilbert Fire Department said it responded to a call of the child notbreathing around 1:15 p.m. at a home near Val Vista Drive and ElliotRoad.

The girl was in the swimming pool for about five minutesbefore the parents found her and pulled her out, according to fireofficials.

The girl has been transported to Cardon’s ChildrensMedical Center in critical condition, but was initially taken to BannerGateway Medical Center, fire officials said.

There are few details available at this time.

Check back for updates.