Foreign Woman Helps Young Girl in Near-Drowning Incident at Beijing Pool
A near drowning at a Beijing pool over the weekend has once again highlighted the need for safety awareness, and public CPR and first aid training.
Theresa Ahdieh, former brand manager for beijingkids, the Beijinger's sister publication, was visiting the public swimming pool at Qingnian Hu Park near Andingmen, with her husband, her son Ty, and other friends.
"The kids were not doing buddies that well, and there were so many people there," Ahdieh said, estimating a crowd of about 200 that day. She walked to the pool's edge to be able to see her son more easily. However, others in attendance told her not to worry, that it was safe and there were lifeguards on duty.
"Not five minutes after my friends told me to relax, the lifeguards are on duty, we see a girl on the side of the pool, lying on the deck, and an older woman pushing on her chest," Ahdieh said. As she approached the scene, she could see that the girl had an oxygen tube inserted in her nose, and that the woman attempting to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was doing so improperly, said Ahdieh, who received CPR and first aid training in the United States.
"Then the lifeguards picked [the girl] up from the knees and shook her upside down to get the water out," Ahdieh said. At this point she intervened, rolling the child, who like many near-drowning victims had begun to regurgitate, on her side. Ahdieh performed a finger sweep to clear mucus and other foreign matter out of the airway, and then called to the child in English. "Her eyes fluttered," she said, at which point some of the Chinese bystanders began calling to the child in Chinese. She then opened her eyes and appeared to breathe on her own. Lifeguards then placed the girl on a stretcher and took her out of the pool area, Ahdieh said. She did not know the ultimate outcome of the emergency, she said.
A moderator from the popular automotive website XCar was also at the pool Saturday, and posted photos of the incident on the forum.
The moderator stated that the water in the pool is 1.3 meters deep. He described the girl as being 1.5 meters tall, "no lifeguards were immediately found, several foreigners were assisting," he writes. The moderator also wrote that the girl opened her eyes and began breathing on her own.
Unintentional drowning among children remains a serious problem. Almost 4,000 people per year died between 2005-2009 in the United States from drowning and boating-related incidents, and one in five of those were 14 or younger.
Ahdieh recommends that parents follow her protocol for swimming in pools: wear bright-colored swim caps, not black or dark blue; swim with a buddy, and move with that buddy, in or out of the water; tell a parent or guardian if they are going into the water or moving to another area; and children should keep their parent or guardian in sight at all times. If the child can see the parent, the parent can see them too, she said.
Both beijingkids and Beijing United Family Hospital looked at summer safety in May 2013. A fact sheet from the US Centers for Disease Control on reducing drowning risk can be found here. A complete list of CPR and first aid training programs in Beijing was published in the 2013-2014 beijingkids Health Guide.
Photo: XCar
Disclosure: Steven Schwankert, the executive editor of the Beijinger and beijingkids parent company True Run Media, is an instructor trainer for Emergency First Response, an international CPR and first aid training organization.
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mtnerror Submitted by Guest on Thu, 07/31/2014 - 12:33 Permalink
Re: Foreign Woman Helps Young Girl in Near-Drowning Incident...
Interesting vocab for a wordsmith to label my comment / question to True Run as "inappropriate." Sorry, Mr. Schwankert, I am a proponent of transparency and I won't allow your opinion to serve as an excuse to skirt the issue pointed out from (part of) my comment: what is True Run's policy on transparency?
You can go about this one of two ways:
-remove my post AND call me out, leaving readers to wonder what horrific thing I must have spewed out onto your website. ([Checkmark]...you have sucessfully done this but there's still time to right your ways)
OR
-re-read my comment and see that I've said I would LOVE to have this lady at a pool where my child might be swimming one day in the future and she should be commended and praised and I hope the girl turned out OK. But that also True Run's transparency policy seems either lacking or is employed inconsistently (or a combo of the two). Remember my comment, which you have deemed 'inappropriate', was also attempting to ascertain why your relationship with an organization that is NOT the subject of this article is mentioned in the authors' comments at the end, but not for articles which are actually SOLELY about a company in which your employer has deep ties to (as seen here: http://www.thebeijinger.com/blog/2014/07/20/revamped-gung-ho-space-china-view-coming-mid-august )
If the policy is not to mention any relationship True Run Media and its employees may have with the contents of the article, then so be it, and do so without prejudice. But that doesn't seem to be your team's M.O. It seems to be deployed here and there but that doesn't equal everywhere. I think it's great you have something on the side which serves to raise awareness and technical abilities of persons in the community over an issue which you have an interest in. But as you have said as much in your comment to me, the article was about a herioic action and not a rundown of where one can emergency response traiing in Beijing. Thus when combined with the lack of transparency seen in other articles, I as a reader raised a flag, hoping my curiousity would be satiated to the betterment of us all.
I am not saying a big shot with TRM can't also work for a pizza company or you can't give a shout out to EFR. However, when transparency is applied consistently I think that serves the reader and community best. Otherwise it can cause the reader to question. Wouldn't you agree?
Finally, I would argue that ALL public safety issues are important -- not just the ones mentioned in this particular story.
Faychangbaoler Submitted by Guest on Tue, 07/29/2014 - 13:39 Permalink
Re: Foreign Woman Helps Young Girl in Near-Drowning Incident...
Yet again, Schwankert shows his true colours by censoring someone elses point of view he happens to disagree with. His censorship style is getting worryingly like the government he lives under now. He also hasn't retracted a completly false article he wrote about a "Creepy foreigner" molesting a girl on the subway, when if fact it was the man's girlfriend. I have little hope this mild comment I have made, will last long without being deleted, as this is Schwankert's way of seeing only points of view that are in line with his.
TX_Chick Submitted by Guest on Mon, 07/28/2014 - 18:23 Permalink
Re: Foreign Woman Helps Young Girl in Near-Drowning Incident...
I just found out today that the Red Cross has a First Aid app for iPhone and I think Andriod that is free. It contains all the basic first aid you learn when you go through their basic first aid certification course.
I am very much aware of the tendency to be blamed when you help, but I would hope that I would be like Theresa and step in when I saw an emergency. If something was being done that I knew was going to be harmful, like she saw, I would definitely do something.
Steven Schwankert Submitted by Guest on Thu, 07/24/2014 - 13:20 Permalink
Re: Foreign Woman Helps Young Girl in Near-Drowning Incident...
MTNerror,
Your comment is inappropriate and I won't allow it to detract from a post about heroic action that calls attention to an important public safety issue.
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