Hundreds evacuated form gas leak in Epping industria

30 Aug

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Emergency Medical services had their hands full today when an unprecedented 150 plus patients had to be taken to various hospitals.

ER24’s national control room in Johannesburg received a call at 12:34 that a major gas leak had occurred at a factory in Epping industria. Moments later when the paramedics arrived at the scene they were shocked at the amount people still streaming out of the surrounding buildings. The paramedics noticed a faint dull smelling gas in the air surrounding the area. With teams allocated to triage the vast amount of patients to various hospitals additional resources were dispatched to the incident. A total of five ER24 ambulances were called in to assist with the situation, bringing the total of on-scene vehicles to eight. Emergency services worked desperately to remove all of the people out of the gas cloud and decided to relocate the injured to the nearby Epping fire station from where they will be taken to hospital.

Although most of the patients had minor gas inhalation symptoms and were coughing, according to paramedics on the scene a number of patients did lose consciousness and needed specialized medical treatment. Hazmat authorities took charge of the scene and will be investigating the origins and specifications of the gas in question.

Andre Visser

ER24

Pilot grateful to be alive after Mossel Bay emergency landing

30 Aug

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Two men had a lucky escape when their light aircraft had to make an emergency landing in Aalwyndal, Mossel Bay, on Saturday afternoon.

Pilot Roger Brink and Dirk Uys, the owner of the plane, were injured.

Emergency equipment had to be used to free them from the wreckage, after which they were taken to hospitals in George and Mossel Bay.

Wreckage

Police closed off the area. A police officer on Sunday guarded the wreckage of the yellow plane, which lay scattered in the bush.

Brink, 48, from Mossel Bay, had an emergency operation on Saturday after breaking a bone in his hand. A metal pin and screws had to be inserted into his hand.

Uys was treated in George and was released on Sunday. He sustained a fracture to his cheek bone and injuries to his left eye.

Brink told Die Burger from his hospital bed on Sunday that the accident had happened at about 14:30 on Saturday.

He had 14 years of flight experience and it was the first time that something like this happened to him.

Uys, who was the passenger, had built the two-seater Cubby plane himself.

Brink said they had taken off on Saturday afternoon from the Mossel Bay airfield. The weather was fine. They had been in the air for about six minutes when the plane started losing power at 1 200 feet.

Power lines

“I knew this meant trouble. There wasn’t any place to land really. I later saw there were power lines. I then landed under the power lines.”

The accident happened about 4km northeast of the airfield.

Brink said he only registered shock about the incident after the accident. He thanked emergency services for their quick action. “I am grateful to be alive.”

Spokesperson for Mossel Bay police, Captain Wollie Fourie, said the Civil Aviation Authority would investigate the accident. It was standard procedure. Police were called to the scene and provided assistance.

Vanessa Jackson from ER24 told Sapa that a plane had done a test flight when it allegedly developed mechanical problems. The passenger side was badly damaged.

[Story by Eugene Gunning appeared in Die Burger]

Family outrages as son’s finger nearly severed in airport accident

30 Aug

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A Waterfall couple are outraged at the Airports Company of South Africa (Acsa) after the top of their two-year-old son’s finger was almost severed in an accident on the escalators at King Shaka International Airport – and no first aid-trained official or first-aid kit was available.

The airport’s medical unit was not answering phone calls and the door to the facility was locked at the time.

It has now been almost three months since the incident and the Hawkins family – who had touched down in Durban after living in the UK for 14 years – have still not received a response from Acsa, even after logging several complaints and requests for follow up.

Last week, The Mercury reported on two other incidents in which passengers were hurt on the escalators at the airport, and that there had been no immediate assistance from Acsa.

In that article, Acsa spokesman Colin Naidoo said: “Should they sustain any injuries (on the escalators), they should go or be directed to the airport clinic, which is operational from 5am to the last arriving flight. We have a clinic which is open according to the airport’s operational hours and trained fire-and-rescue staff, who are also trained paramedics.”

But Rosemary Hawkins said this was not the case on June 1, when she and her sons, Cameron, five, and Kieran, two – each pulling their own travel bags – arrived from the UK. They were riding on the escalators near passport control when Kieran slipped.

The boy slid along until he reached the floor plate and landing platform, where the stairs flatten and disappear, and his bag stopped him sliding further. However, his finger was sliced.

“Another passenger picked him up and when I saw his finger was almost severed, I shouted for someone to get a first aider or a first-aid box,” said Hawkins. “A member of the flight crew tried to get hold of the medical unit, but no one was answering the phone.”

The top of Kieran’s finger was hanging to the side and only attached by a piece of flesh, his mother said.

Hawkins, who is trained in first aid, asked for a first-aid kit, but one could not be found. She was holding her son’s hand above his head to reduce the bleeding.

“Some of the flight crew asked the security guards if they could go back to the plane to get their first-aid kit, but the guards wouldn’t allow them to,” she said.

Hawkins said someone then called emergency fire staff, who arrived with a first-aid kit, but one of them wanted to wrap Kieran’s finger in cotton wool, which horrified her. “If the little fibres got in there, then they could poison him. I asked them to get me some gauze, but they didn’t know what that was? They admitted that they were not trained paramedics.”

Eventually Hawkins used a muslin cloth from her bag to bind her son’s finger and a guard phoned the Alberlito Hospital, in Ballito, which sent an ambulance and contacted a doctor to go to the airport.

Escorted by police, Hawkins carried her son up another escalator and to the airport clinic, only to find it was locked.

When they eventually got inside, the doctor strapped up Kieran’s finger before sending him to hospital, where trauma staff feared it might have to be amputated. Although it was sewn back successfully, and the nail bed was saved, Kieran no longer uses his finger and has switched to using his left hand.

Although Hawkins praised the Emirates airlines crew – who stayed with her and her sons until they went to hospital – and the airport security staff, she was furious that Acsa had still not responded to the incident report.

She said that she and her husband were considering taking legal action.

Naidoo said he was investigating the matter and would respond on Monday.

* This article by Bronwyn Gerretsen was originally published on page 4 of The Mercury on August 30, 2010

Woman Knocked Down By Bus In Seapoint

29 Aug

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A woman in her thirties has allegedly been knocked down by a commuter bus on Beach Road in Seapoint.

False Bay volunteer paramedics were driving on Beach Road when the incident happened, and they stopped to assist the critically injured woman. ER24 paramedics were called to the scene, and the Seapoint Community Medics also lent their assistance.

The woman had sustained what seemed to be severe head injuries and broken bones in her face, she was in a critical condition. Paramedics stabilised her on scene, placed her on spinal immobilisation equipment, and loaded her into the awaiting ambulance.

She was transported to a nearby hospital in a serious but stable condition. The driver of the bus seems to have been left uninjured in the accident.

The Seapoint police were on the scene.

Vanessa Jackson
ER24

Light Aircraft Makes Emergency Landing near Mossel Bay

29 Aug

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A light aircraft performing a test flight suddenly needed to make an emergency landing after the aircraft allegedly experienced mechanical failure.

The pilot allegedly needed to perform evasive maneuvers for overlying power lines while also trying to control the aircraft. Fortunately he was able to steer the aircraft underneath the lines and further into an emergency landing in a field near Alwyndal.

Both the pilot an passenger were lucky enough to only have sustained slight physical injuries, but they were both visibly shaken. The passenger side of the aircraft was severely damaged, and the Jaws of Life needed to be used to get the man out. It seems that he was treated on scene for a mild concussion.

Both patients were transported by road ambulance to hospital where they will be further assessed and treated.

The fate of the two men in their late thirties could have been so much worse. The necessary officials will be investigating the accident.

Vanessa Jackson
ER24

Man seriously injured in staircase plunge

28 Aug

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A Pietermaritzburg man is in a serious but stable condition in the Edendale Hospital after falling approximately three metres when a staircase gave way in the Lay Centre in Edendale this morning.

Details of the structural collapse remain vague. The man alleges that he had been walking up the concrete staircase in the building from the ground to the first floor. The floor appears to have given way and the man plunged onto the level below.

He sustained serious lower limb and facial trauma, as well as suspected spinal injuries. He was transported by ambulance to the Edendale Hospital for further medical attention.

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Woman Dies After Being Knocked Down By Train

27 Aug

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An elderly lady has been killed after she was knocked by a train in Kimberley.

The tragic incident took place in the industrial area near Main road, where the railway tracks run in between the buildings. The driver of the train said that he actually saw the woman on the tracks, and he tried to bring the goods train to a halt but with the heavy load it seemed almost impossible. He also said that he had tried to alert her with the air horn, but to no avail.

When ER24 paramedics arrived on the scene the woman was barely alive, and they did what they could for her whilst on the scene and loaded quickly into the awaiting ambulance for transport. Sadly, despite all attempts by the paramedics, there was no change in her already critical condition, and as they arrived at the hospital her condition further deteriorated. Staff at the hospital also attempted life saving treatment, but there was nothing more that they could do to save this woman’s life, and she was declared deceased shortly after arrival.

The woman had sustained severe, multiple critical injuries; paramedics on the scene determined that she had a head injury, multiple deep cuts, several broken bones in her lower limbs, severe chest injuries and possible internal injuries in her stomach.

It will be the duty of the local police service to investigate this accident, and to determine who the woman was so as to inform her family.

Vanessa Jackson

ER24

Man seriously injured in staircase plunge in Edendale

27 Aug

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A Pietermaritzburg man is in a serious but stable condition in the Edendale Hospital after falling approximately three metres when a staircase gave way in the Lay Centre in Edendale this morning.

Details of the structural collapse remain vague. The man alleges that he had been walking up the concrete staircase in the building from the ground to the first floor. The floor appears to have given way and the man plunged onto the level below.

He sustained serious lower limb and facial trauma, as well as suspected spinal injuries. He was transported by ambulance to the Edendale Hospital for further medical attention

Family Rivalry Ends Badly For Sister

26 Aug

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ER24 paramedics from Pietermaritzburg were called out to assist Hilton SAPS after a family feud ended badly with two sisters fighting. One of the sisters was stabbed in the back and sustained 5 degree burns to her back and abdomen after being thrown with boiling water over her, narrowly missing her one year old child which she was carrying at the time of the fight.

Paramedics had to put up a drip to give fluids and pain medication. She was taken to Northdale Hospital for further medical treatment. The one year child was taken for a general check up.

It is unclear what caused the sisters fight or how it progressed to such violence.
Hilton SAPS will be investigating the incident further.

Derrick Banks
ER24

Man falls to his death from Durban beach front hotel

26 Aug

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A 49-year-old man plunged to his death from the twenty fifth floor of a prominent Durban beach front hotel late last night.

The circumstances leading up to and surrounding the plunge are unclear and area police have launched an investigation into the incident.

The man landed on the gravel covered roof of a third floor parking structure and sustained critical injuries.

He had died prior to the arrival of medics and was declared dead at the scene.