Amazing story of teamwork

Posted by: LED

Amazing story of teamwork - 07/10/12 07:45 AM

Hopefully the CHP paramedic will fully recover from his injuries. Amazing that everyone pulled together to save his life. Wow.

Hiker waiting for rescue helps CHP officer

Quote:

And they waited with Kilburn and Grasso while help slowly made its way the 40 miles from Redding. By 6:30 p.m., a CHP helicopter piloted by Officer Brian Henderson circled and circled the nearby valley before spotting a small flat spot 100 feet below the injured doctor.

Kilburn was facing away from the helicopter.

"None of us thought he'd be able to land the helicopter," he said. "It was a brilliantly executed landing. The kids were cheering when the pilot finally cut the engine. And then I heard the kids saying, 'Oh, my God! Oh, my God! It's terrible!'

"My friend says, 'Dude, this guy got hit in the head with the main rotor.'

"I said, 'Get me down there immediately.' I was trying to run with one leg. It was a nightmare getting down there."

Together, all of them saved a life.

Stanley, the paramedic, was hit by the main rotor rushing to rescue Kilburn. At Stanley's request, CHP officials declined to release more details about the extent of what happened to him.

Posted by: hikermor

Re: Amazing story of teamwork - 07/10/12 11:39 AM

A really inspiring story, but one cries out for details and clarification, as is usually the case with most news stories. Victims hit in the head by a main rotor generally do not require extensive first aid; a body bag will suffice.
Posted by: nursemike

Re: Amazing story of teamwork - 07/10/12 12:56 PM

Article on medevac choppers

The ems system has its share of paradoxes. It is hard to describe the relief I have felt when the chopper arrived to carry a trauma patient or sick baby from my rural community hospital ER to the distant university medical center in time to make a difference, but I have lost a number of colleagues in air crashes. Tough, dangerous work that saves a relatively small number of lives at great risk to the crews and great expense to the system, analogous to the cost-benefit issues in complex SAR missions.