Did You Hear About This One?

Nurses General Nursing

Published

NEW LONDON, Connecticut (AP) -- A spark from a defibrillator set a woman's clothing on fire when a paramedic tried to restart her heart in an ambulance.

Brenda Jewett, 47, was pronounced dead at a hospital Monday. An autopsy was scheduled to determine the cause of her death.

Neither the paramedic nor other members of the ambulance crew were injured by the fire.

Prosecutors asked the state police, fire marshals and the state Office of Emergency Medical Services to investigate.

"I've been in this business 20 years and I've never heard of something like this," said Leonard Guercia Jr., the state's EMS director.

Mary Newman of the National Center for Early Defibrillation in Pittsburgh said the center had never heard of such a case before. She said she doubted the fire or the defibrillator caused Jewett's death.

"When you defibrillate a person, they are already dead," she said.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/Northeast/01/28/defibrillator.fire.ap/index.html

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Would that be turning off the O2 during discharge of the defibulator?:confused: What a PITA! And what about ABC? I belive you need O2 for that?

Originally posted by gizelda

Do you have any more cheat sheets for acls. I like the tea one!!!! what else ya got?

Try the link below:

http://www.acls.net/aclsalg.htm

-HBS

Specializes in critical care.

IamRN

You are right I meant the Rwave, silly me:)

dawngloves: yes you are using o2 during the code but during the defib it is turned off and then back on. They are now teaching the chant " one I'm clear, two your clear, three the o2 is off, 4 everybody clear" or something to that effect right before shocking.

. I just recertified 2 weeks ago and starting Feb this new o2 turning off thing willbe fully implemented including the chant.

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