Make this page my home page

  1. Drag the home icon in this panel and drop it onto the "house icon" in the tool bar for the browser

  2. Select "Yes" from the popup window and you're done!

Lion Apparel Introduces Flame-Resistant, ...

Eight treated for CO at N.C. motel


Fire Rehab

Sponsors

Masimo
Resources
National Incident Command Center Daily Fire Report USFA Emergency Incident Rehabilitation Manual IAFC: Fighting Heat Stress U.S. EPA Excessive Heat Events Guidebook (PDF) FirefighterCloseCalls.com's Rehabilitation Training Slideshow (PPT)
All Resources

Featured Product Categories
Burnover Protection Vehicle Graphics Intercoms Risk Assessment Software Books
View All Categories

FireRescue1 Poll
Does your state offer an annual Fire/EMS grant program?
Fire Rehab Tips
Using Juniors as a Rehab Team Our rehab unit Cold weather basics Use cool vests in hot weather 'Gear Down, Cool Down'
More tips
Videos
Treating Heat Injuries - 1983 Salvation Army Provides Rehab Masimo at EMS Today 2008 Reintubation - Masimo SET vs. N-200/N-290/N-295/N-3000 WCCO Minneapolis on Masimo Rad-57 preventing CO deaths
More Videos
Fire Rehab Products

Product Categories:
CO Screening
Rehabilitation

Featured Products:

Masimo Rad-57™ Pulse CO-Oximeter

Fire Rehab Article

Print Talk BackRegisterBookmarkRSSWhat's This


Eight treated for CO at N.C. motel

The News & Observer (Raleigh, North Carolina)

RALEIGH, N.C. — Eight people staying at a motel in South Raleigh were treated for carbon monoxide poisoning Tuesday after a water heater malfunctioned.

The Super 8 Motel at 2501 S. Saunders St. was evacuated while firefighters searched for the source of the leak.

James Poole, division chief with the Raleigh Fire Department, said investigators found a heavy concentration of carbon monoxide in the laundry room.

"There was 35 parts per million in the laundry room," he said. "One hundred parts per million is lethal."

Emergency workers learned about the leak just before 4:30 a.m., when five hotel guests in a vehicle on Glenwood Avenue flagged an ambulance and said they were sick. Emergency workers determined they had symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning and took them to WakeMed's Raleigh campus.

Two employees and 35 guests were evacuated, including three people who were taken to WakeMed. A hazmat team ventilated the hotel and had the problem under control by 7 a.m., Poole said.

Copyright 2008 The News and Observer



LexisNexis Copyright © 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.   Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy


Print Talk BackRegisterBookmarkRSSWhat's This

Member Comments: Submit Your Comment
FireRescue1 encourages its members to comment on this article in the comments section below. You must be a registered member of FireRescue1 to post a comment. The comments below are member-generated and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of FireRescue1 or its staff.

Most Commented Articles
 1.  The Things I Carried
 2.  Tenn. volunteer struck while directing traffic
 3.  Ohio fire chief under investigation over alleged shoving
 4.  Firefighters face roadside vest regulations
 5.  Interior Use of Positive Pressure – Part 1
 6.  Federal high-visibility vest rule takes effect
 7.  Vacant buildings boarded up after vagrants blamed in Va. fire
 8.  What's Going On Out There?
 9.  Fla. city settles suit with volunteer firefighters
 10.  Safety of Ohio firefighters put to test by area company