Firefighter who collapsed at scene and needed CPR makes full recovery
MEDINA – A Ridgeway volunteer firefighter who collapsed and needed CPR at the scene of a fire on Thursday has made a full recovery, Medina and Ridgeway fire officials announced in a press release this afternoon.
As crews were finishing active firefighting operations at 515 North Academy St. on April 4, the Ridgeway firefighter suddenly collapsed in the street without warning.
The firefighter, whose name is not being released, did not have a pulse and wasn’t breathing. High-quality CPR was initiated, and the firefighter was defibrillated five times over the course of the next 14 minutes while simultaneously receiving advanced airway control and multiple Advanced Cardiac Life Support medications, according to the news release from Medina FD and the Ridgeway Volunteer Fire Company.
The firefighter was initially going to be transported directly to Buffalo General but was too unstable at that point and was taken to Medina Memorial Hospital Emergency Department. Once stabilized by team members at Medina Hospital but still critical, the firefighter was transferred by a team of Medina firefighters to Buffalo General.
“We are happy to announce that the firefighter walked out of the hospital today after being discharged home, 100% neurologically intact!” said Steve Cooley, Medina Fire Department lieutenant and public information officer.
The two fire departments thanked the following for their assistance at the scene, after the fire and cardiac arrest: Albion Fire Department, Medina Police Department, Orleans County Dispatchers, Medina Memorial Emergency Department Staff, Orleans County Director and Deputy Director of Emergency Services and the Staff at Buffalo General.
Those agencies assisting Ridgeway with immediate district coverage after the event were Middleport, Hartland, Shelby, East Shelby, and Murray Fire Departments.
Sudden Cardiac Arrest can happen anywhere at any time, Cooley said. He urged people to learn CPR.
The American Heart Association has released Heart and Stroke Statistics for 2022. According to the report, cardiac arrest remains a public health crisis. There are more than 356,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests annually in the U.S., nearly 90% of them fatal. The incidence of EMS-assessed non-traumatic OHCA in people of any age is estimated to be 356,461, or nearly 1,000 people each day. Survival to hospital discharge after EMS-treated cardiac arrest languishes at about 10%, Cooley said.