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View Full Version : 2 Investigators: Nursing Home Patient Catches Fire, Left To Smolder Outside



Teh One Who Knocks
10-02-2013, 11:37 AM
Dave Savini - CBS 2 Chicago


(CBS) — A man smoking a cigarette catches on fire. What happens next has outraged his family.

CBS 2′s Dave Savini has video of the incident.

Lisa Couch says her brother, Michael Lewis, was nearing the end of his stay at Lake Shore HealthCare and Rehabilitation Centre when tragedy struck.

“He burned to death,” she says. “He sustained burns like from mid-thigh up to the eyebrows.”

Security camera footage shows Lewis on the patio, a designated smoking area, when the lighter in his pocket suddenly catches his shirt on fire. Residents try, but fail, to put out the flames. Lewis then frantically pushes himself back inside to get help.

“The horror, to think my brother is on fire and no one is there?” Couch says.

The video shows frantic workers inside the building. Staff members spray Lewis with a fire extinguisher; then they roll him back outside, where his smoldering body covered in foam sits motionless.

“Doesn’t look like they were trying to take care of Michael,” his sister says.

State nursing home regulators say spraying Lewis directly with the extinguisher was against the rules.

Dr. Stanley Zydlo, an emergency response expert, watched the video and says there were numerous additional problems.

“There didn’t seem to be anybody in control as to who was to do what,” Zydlo says.

He also said a blanket should have been used to cover Lewis immediately. Someone should have been checking the victim’s airway, too, he says.

More than five minutes after the fire, a man in blue scrubs brings oxygen.

“We don’t see anybody evaluating him or doing CPR for him,” Zydlo notes.

In fact, there’s no evidence on the security camera video of anyone performing life-saving CPR on Lewis until after Chicago EMS crews arrive on the scene. By then, crucial minutes had already passed.

Rescue crews find Lewis lifeless in cardiac arrest. Ten minutes after the fire started, CPR was finally administered.

Zydlo says someone should have put damp sheets on Lewis.

“The burn process is progressive unless you cool it down,” says Zydlo. “It will continue.”

Facility representatives refused to talk on-camera about Michael Lewis’s death. They sent a statement saying they cannot comment due to privacy laws.

The home was cited for failing to train staff in emergency procedures.

“There was no one there to help him,” Couch says.

She says her brother was getting ready to leave the facility and return home. She has filed a lawsuit against Lakeshore HealthCare and Rehabilitation Centre.

Hal-9000
10-02-2013, 05:55 PM
they needed Richard Cranium :(

Richard Cranium
10-02-2013, 07:08 PM
they needed Richard Cranium :(

I don't repair exploding lighters but I do recommend that Mr. Lewis should quit smoking.

Hal-9000
10-02-2013, 08:12 PM
If you were on scene with your large hose, Mr Lewis would only be having 3rd degree skin grafts today..

redred
10-02-2013, 08:30 PM
Who told you rich had a large hose :lol:

Hal-9000
10-02-2013, 08:33 PM
he's a brawny firemenz...they all have big hoses


*swoons*

deebakes
10-02-2013, 08:42 PM
:burn:



8-[

Richard Cranium
10-02-2013, 08:43 PM
http://whatscookingamerica.net/Cookie/Smores/Smores.jpg



Ok, seriously..


Without the benefit of any real knowledge this a guess based on the mental picture that this story is painting for me..

Nobody is trained to deal with this sort of crazy shit, nobody walks around with wet blankets ready to put a fire out. for lack of a nearby fish pond to push him in I would have likely hit him with an extinguisher and dealt with the bad that goes with that after the fire was out.

It seems very likely that this guy was basically dead with out a fully equipped Paramedic close enough by to witness the fire. A nurse, Dr, EMT of firefighter wasn't going to do jack shit. A person sustaining that kind of burn has massive burning of the airway (throat down to lungs) that would require near instantaneous insertion of an intubation tube before it swells shut to have a chance of any success. I carry airways that go about 3" down, useless in this case.

CPR, yeah, would have been nice, useless but nice. I picture a bunch of employees trained to American Red Cross Basic First Aid standards all standing around going " WTF just happened" could repeat itself time and again across the country given the same set of circumstances,

To be honest, sounds like he soaked himself in lighter fluid and torched himself.. but thats just the picture my mind has painted from the story as written.

Hal-9000
10-02-2013, 09:24 PM
http://whatscookingamerica.net/Cookie/Smores/Smores.jpg



Ok, seriously..


Without the benefit of any real knowledge this a guess based on the mental picture that this story is painting for me..

Nobody is trained to deal with this sort of crazy shit, nobody walks around with wet blankets ready to put a fire out. for lack of a nearby fish pond to push him in I would have likely hit him with an extinguisher and dealt with the bad that goes with that after the fire was out.

It seems very likely that this guy was basically dead with out a fully equipped Paramedic close enough by to witness the fire. A nurse, Dr, EMT of firefighter wasn't going to do jack shit. A person sustaining that kind of burn has massive burning of the airway (throat down to lungs) that would require near instantaneous insertion of an intubation tube before it swells shut to have a chance of any success. I carry airways that go about 3" down, useless in this case.

CPR, yeah, would have been nice, useless but nice. I picture a bunch of employees trained to American Red Cross Basic First Aid standards all standing around going " WTF just happened" could repeat itself time and again across the country given the same set of circumstances,

To be honest, sounds like he soaked himself in lighter fluid and torched himself.. but thats just the picture my mind has painted from the story as written.


I think the issue was more that there were no staff on the smoking patio and people felt that if there were, maybe they could have put him out.


As for the staff member possibly getting in shit for trying a fire extinguisher, I think that's total crap. I would want someone to try something...


yes it's all well and good for them to say - he should have been immediately covered in a blanket - but not many people in a crisis think clearly or know the #1 step to perform


as with you, I'm getting this from the article..

Acid Trip
10-03-2013, 04:31 PM
The video shows frantic workers inside the building. Staff members spray Lewis with a fire extinguisher; then they roll him back outside, where his smoldering body covered in foam sits motionless.

The logic behind putting him back outside (after spraying him with a fire extinguisher) escapes me. Did they not think he needed serious medical attention?