© Facebook | Andrea ReneeIn a bid to rescue Yuna, one of the firefighters drove her to Massachusetts General Hospital in his car but it was too late and she was pronounced dead on arrival
A two-year-old girl died from a cardiac arrest after an overrun ambulance service sent firemen instead of trained medics to save her.Little Yuna Feeley, from
Massachusetts, was suffering from a respiratory illness when she suddenly went limp and stopped breathing on the morning of January 26.
Her mother, Andrea Feeley, frantically called 911 but the local ambulance service sent a fire crew instead.
When firemen arrived it was immediately clear
Yuna needed advanced life support that trained paramedics could provide, so they radioed in for an ambulance.But Action Ambulance Service, the private company that provides ambulance service to Winthrop, Greater Boston, did not have enough ambulance available to respond to the call.
After around 15 minutes, well above the eight-minute benchmark for ambulances to respond to cardiac arrests, there was still no ambulance in sight.
In a bid to rescue Yuna, one of the firefighters drove her to Massachusetts General Hospital in his car with two colleagues delivering CPR but it was too late and she was pronounced dead on arrival.The incident comes amid a chronic shortage of ambulance operators and EMS workers in the Boston area, which experts say is putting public safety at risk.
A spokesperson for Action Ambulance told DailyMail.com: 'Our hearts go out to Yuna Feeley's family. This was a devastating incident for everyone involved, and our crews did everything possible to help that day.
'The EMS system in Massachusetts and across the country is stressed due to an increase in calls, staffing challenges and backlogs in our hospital emergency rooms.
© Facebook | Andrea ReneeAn autopsy report confirmed Yuna's official cause of death as a rare but severe lung infection called 'necrotizing pneumonia' which proved fatal on top of her respiratory virus
'These are challenges we are working to overcome every day, and we look forward to working with our partners and local and state governments on meaningful solutions.'
An autopsy report confirmed Yuna's official cause of death as a rare but severe lung infection called 'necrotizing pneumonia' which proved fatal on top of her respiratory virus.The girl deserved 'an ambulance and paramedics who could have possibly done more,' her mom told NBC10 Boston.
An investigation launched by Boston Globe attributes the child's death in part to a severe shortage of ambulances in the Boston area, with overworked paramedics adding to the problem.
It explains: 'There is no central or regionalized system to track the location of ambulances in real time, and no one evaluating whether the number of ambulances on the road is sufficient.
'For ambulances that are in operation, chronic staffing shortages mean sometimes badly needed ambulances that are supposed to be in the field stay parked in garages, unused.
'And when the ambulances are staffed, in some cases the same overworked EMTs and paramedics are sent out over and over again during long shifts that can result in serious mistakes.'
Many Massachusetts ambulance workers revealed that they regularly worked double and triple shifts.
During the investigation - which involved interviewing more than 50 industry experts, current and former EMTs paramedics, and others -
The Globe identified three other deaths in the state, including two in Winthrop, that occurred in the run up to Yuna's death.In these cases, the paramedics were subsequently investigated by the state for negligence.In Yuna's case, firefighters arrived at the scene seven minutes after the 911 call was made and she arrived at the hospital 23 minutes later.
© NBCAndrea Feeley frantically put in call to 911 when her daughter Yuna went into cardiac arrest one morning in January. However, no ambulance arrived and the tot later died in hospital
As her daughter fought for her life, Ms Feeley just remembers repeating 'where are they? where are they?' before realizing that the ambulance service wasn't going to come in time.
She said everything seemed fine and she had just been encouraging Yuna to take a drink of Pedialyte to help her keep hydrated while dealing with a mild fever she'd had for a couple of days.
However, as Yuna was in her mother's arms she
suddenly went limp and stopped breathing.
Ms Feeley's son called 911 and within minutes local firefighters arrived at the family home in Winthrop to administer CPR on Yuna.
When Ms Feeley's son contacted 911, the call went through to
Action Ambulance Service, a private company that provides ambulance services to Winthrop.Both of the firm's ambulances were responding to other calls.
In this scenario, the community relies on help through neighboring towns but their ambulance services were similarly stretched.
Sadie Whitelocks is currently a senior health reporter and joined MailOnline in 2011. Along with health, her specialisms include wellness and adventure travel and in 2018 she covered a story for the site to break the Guinness World Record for the highest dinner party on Mount Everest at 7,056m. Other far-flung destinations she has covered include Antarctica, Mongolia, Papua New Guinea and the wilds of Guyana, with MailOnline helping to map an uncharted river in the Amazon. Along with mountains, martinis are another of Sadie's joys.
Reader Comments
And it's happening everywhere.
All that Health Experts know with certainty is that it was absolutely, positively, not the experimental injections, that are in mid to long term testing...still. But it wasn't them.
I miss the most important information - again.
SOTT reader comments are right on.
It's just another 2-year old with cardiac arrest amid an infrastructure crumbling under the stress of excess emergencies and death. Normal day after mandatory vaxxinations.
If insurance company CEO's can face retribution in the street, why can't the vaxx manufacturers and promoters face the same fate?
I'm guessing that this company will soon get some action...through the court system.
Yes, I've seen it.