SingUp Now Help Contact Home Page The One Resource for Firefighters and the Fire Service
 
Search:
  Login Login     My Profile My Profile  
Products:
Fire News Fire Products Fire Research Topics Fire-EMS Wildland Firefighting Fire Training Fire Jobs Firefighter Safety Fire Forums

Carbon monoxide sent Denver family of three to hospital


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
Water Rescue EMS Supplies Emergency Response Tools Gear Radios
View All Categories

FireRescue1 Poll
With regard to NFPA 1584 and Firefighter rehabilitation, my department
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
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 Fox 13 News Segment on Masimo Rad-57
More Videos
Fire Rehab Products

Product Categories:
CO Screening
Rehabilitation

Featured Products:

Masimo Rad-57™ Pulse CO-Oximeter

Fire Rehab Article

Print Talk BackRegister RSSWhat's This

Carbon monoxide sent Denver family of three to hospital

Rocky Mountain News

DENVER — A small charcoal grill being used to heat the home of a Denver family is suspected as the source of carbon monoxide poisoning that sent a toddler and his parents to the hospital.

Denver fire fighters received a call about 11:03 a.m. that a toddler was unconscious on a duplex in the 3600 block of West Walsh Place, Heather Green, a technician with the Denver Fire Department said. When fire crews arrived, they found an unconscious toddler and a couple that was "acting a bit peculiar."

Green said firefighters found high levels of carbon monoxide.

All three were transported to the hospital by Denver Health ambulances, she said.

No details were available on their identities, conditions, or what hospital was treating the family.

A neighbor, Rose Marquette, said an elderly man banged on her apartment door.

When she answered the door, the man handed over his phone and repeated, "You help me. You help me."

"The dispatch was asking me his address. I didn’t even know who he was or where he lived. I pointed to the door and he nodded with his head," she said.

After she provided dispatch with the address, she went into the apartment and saw the small grill on the kitchen floor. There were no flames in the grill but the coals appeared to be lit.

Marquette said the toddler, who was about two to three years old, was struggling to cry, but was breathing.
She said she could not tell if the child was a boy or girl.

"The little baby would open his eyes. He was breathing and crying," she said. "He didn’t look unconscious. He looked relatively OK," Marquette said.

Marquette said the couple did not speak English.



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


Print Talk BackRegister RSSWhat's This




Back to previous page








FIRERESCUE1 TOPICS
Fire Resources | Fire News | Fire Products | FR1 Video | Fire-EMS | Fire Careers | Firefighter Safety | Wildland Firefighting | Fire Video News | Fire Grants |

FIRERESCUE1 NETWORK
FlashoverTV.com | FireGrantsHelp.com | FireRehab.com | VolunteerFD.org | EMS1.com | PPE101.com | PraetorianGroup.com | Homeland1.com |

© Copyright 2008 - FireRescue1.com. All Rights Reserved.