Siegel, Anderson and Clifton honored at KAA banquet

(Pictured left to right: Dan Siegel, Mark Clifton and Lisa Anderson)

Dan Siegel, Lisa Anderson and Mark Clifton were honored at the Killingworth Ambulance Association’s annual banquet last weekend for their service as EMTs over the past year.

The three were the top responders among the KAA’s EMTs, with Siegel answering the most calls, Anderson second and Clifton third. In fact, Siegel – an active member of the KAA since 2007 — was involved in nearly half the calls, responding to 156 of the 329, or 47 percent.

Anderson answered 133 and Clifton 130.

All are among the top responders each year, with Clifton leading the KAA in 2017-18 and Anderson second.

“They are always near the top in calls taken,” said KAA president Dan O’Sullivan. “They have all responded to over a third of all calls for emergency medical assistance in Killingworth in the last year – with Dan responding to almost half. That is amazing.

“They carry out their responsibilities with great pride and professionalism. This is a volunteer activity, and the amount of personal time and energy – along with the effect on their families for this level of response – shows an outstanding commitment to helping all the citizens of Killingworth.

“Calls can take two to three hours and occur at all hours of the day and night. The ambulance association deeply thanks all volunteers … but especially these three, who have gone so far and above the call of duty. Please join me in thanking them personally if you know them or see them.”

The annual banquet, held at La Foresta, was attended by KAA board members, EMTs, representatives of the Killingworth Volunteer Fire Company, neighboring ambulance associations involved in Mutual Aid with the KAA, town officials and retired EMT service providers.

“All of these people, with their time, dedication and sacrifice, are critical,” said O’Sullivan.

O’Sullivan and Zach Skalandunas were also honored for their years of service. Each has been an EMT the past five years.

Town Hall latest site for “Stop the Bleed” station

The KAA’s James Fretz (l) and Killingworth First Selectwoman Cathy Iino (r) stand next to the “Stop the Bleed” station installed at Town Hall.

When the Killingworth Ambulance Association approached First Selectwoman Cathy Iino about installing a “Stop the Bleed” station in Town Hall, she never wavered with a decision.

“I would say it was a no-brainer,” she said.

Now it’s more than that. It’s a done deal.

For the second time in eight days the KAA on Thursday afternoon placed a bleeding control station in one of Killingworth’s public spaces. But unlike the first installation — which happened Aug. 9 in the Killingworth library – this one comes with a back story that involves Town Hall.

In fact, it involves Cathy Iino.

She and other Town Hall employees took a “Stop the Bleed” course in May, 2018, with Iino putting the lesson into practice this spring when she lacerated her right thumb with a kitchen knife on a cutting board. The accident involved bleeding, demanded immediate medical attention and required stitches.

In short, everything she learned in class.

“I cut myself quite seriously after that class,” she said, “so I almost … without thinking … knew to do the compression and elevation and get medical treatment quite fast.”

“Stop the Bleed” is a nationwide awareness campaign (www.bleedingcontrol.org) launched in 2015 by the White House and Department of Homeland Security and is designed to empower bystanders with the training to deal with traumatic events and emergency bleeding situations before help arrives.

The KAA first offered “Stop the Bleed” classes in July, 2017, making Killingworth the first Connecticut town to have its citizens certified. Since that time it has conducted 21 classes, with another scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 9, at the Killingworth Ambulance Association on Route 81.

The class lasts one hour and is free and open to the public.

The KAA first offered bleeding control stations this month, with the KAA’s James Fretz installing the storage cases at the Killingworth library and Town Hall. Each case contains seven “Stop the Bleed” kits to treat traumatic blood loss, and each kit includes a tourniquet, gauze, quick-clot and gloves.

The KAA hopes to install more stations in the near future.

“I think it’s a good idea,” Iino said, “because we all took the ‘Stop the Bleed’ training, and we understand that time is of the essence – and that, therefore, the quicker we can take action the better.”

First “Stop the Bleed” station installed at local library

(The KAA’s James Fretz is pictured shortly after installing the first “Stop the Bleed” bleeding control station at the Killingworth library).

For the past two years the Killingworth Ambulance Association has made “Stop the Bleed” classes available to the town. Now, it’s gone a step farther.

It installed its first bleeding control station.

The location is the Killingworth library, and the site makes sense for two reasons: 1) It is a public gathering spot for people of all ages, and 2) the library hosted a “Stop the Bleed” class last year. In fact, it was because of that class that library director Laurie Prichard – who attended the one-hour session – was interested in having a bleeding control station installed.

“It’s for the safety of our patrons,” she said. “With everything that’s going on today you want to make sure that, if someone needs help, you can provide it.”

And the library can. The station is located on the wall immediately behind the library’s front desk, with at least one staff member who attended last year’s “Stop the Bleed” class always available. Assembled Wednesday by the KAA’s James Fretz, the storage case contains seven “Stop the Bleed” kits to treat traumatic blood loss – with each including a tourniquet, gauze, quick-clot and gloves.

The “Stop the Bleed” campaign, launched in 2015 by the White House and Department of Homeland Security, is designed to equip persons with the training to deal with emergency bleeding situations and with the tools to save lives. In fact, Killingworth two summers ago became the first town in Connecticut to have its citizens certified in the program, with 19 completing the course.

Until now, the KAA has continued that campaign through a series of free instructions, including one scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 9. But with the installation of its first emergency station in a public venue, it has expanded the program – hoping that others follow the lead of the Killingworth library.

“I’d recommend it,” Prichard said, “because you don’t know what could happen, and you don’t want to be in a position when someone you care about didn’t get the help they needed because one of these wasn’t available.”

 

KAA cancels EMT class; January course to be held “no matter what”

The Killingworth Ambulance Association canceled its annual EMT class, scheduled to begin August 19, because of insufficient enrollment but will offer another course beginning in January, 2020.

“We did not have enough students,” KAA vice-president Marguerite Haaga said of the decision. “We would like a minimum of six. It makes the class more interesting.”

Haaga teaches the class with her husband, Mike, the KAA’s Chief of Service.

Initially, five students registered for the course, due to be completed by Thanksgiving, but that figure dropped to four after one person bowed out. A decision to cancel was made, and e-mails notifying those who had enrolled of the change were sent out Friday, Aug. 16 – or three days before the course was to begin.

The move marks the second time within the past two years that an EMT class had to be scrapped, and Haaga said that’s unusual. But she had a ready explanation.

“There are a lot more EMT classes that are offered in the area than in the past,” she said.

The KAA currently has 22 active EMTs.

The next EMT course will be offered on Jan. 20, 2020, and will be held “no matter what,” Haaga said. In addition, Haaga will conduct an EMR and EMT refresher class starting on Thursday, Nov. 7, and running through Sunday, Nov. 10.

“STB” class slated for August 22

The Killingworth Ambulance Association will conduct the second of its two “Stop the Bleed” classes this month on Thursday, August 22, at the KAA’s headquarters on Route 81.

The course, which is free and open to the public, is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. and lasts approximately one hour. A previous “Stop the Bleed” class was held on Aug. 10 in the KAA building.

“Stop the Bleed” is a nationwide awareness campaign and call to action that was launched in 2015 by the White House and Department of Homeland Security. It is designed to empower bystanders with the training to deal with traumatic events and emergency bleeding situations before emergency help arrives.

Killingworth three years ago became the first town in Connecticut to have its citizens certified in the program when 19 persons completed a one-hour course. Since then, the KAA has offered “Stop the Bleed” instruction to roughly 250 local citizens.

For more information, please contact the KAA at (860) 663-2450.

EMT classes set for August; here’s why that could interest you

Until a red oak tree in front of the Killingworth Ambulance Association headquarters was removed in June, it held a sign that read, “Volunteers Needed; Training Available.” The sign was taken down with the tree, but the need for EMTs remains.

So does the training.

In fact, the KAA will hold another EMT course next month, with the first class scheduled for August 19 and instruction ending at an undisclosed time before Thanksgiving. Classes will be held on Mondays and Thursdays from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m., with five Saturdays also included … and if that sounds like a commitment, it’s because it is.

So why get involved? Let us count the ways. What follows are 10 advantages to becoming an EMT with the Killingworth Ambulance Association:

  • A 50 percent reimbursement of course fees after six months of active service.
  • The remaining 50 percent paid after one year of active service.
  • The KAA pays for active members to attend EMS Pro (a state conference) and the annual Connecticut Trauma Conference.
  • The town of Killingworth has a $1,000 abatement for active members.
  • The KAA reimburses the cost for state recertification for EMTs or EMRs.
  • The KAA also offers a subscription to an online Continuing Medical Education (CME) program.
  • The KAA offers a $50 stipend for each transporting call and $25 for non-transporting.
  • Uniforms are supplied, with a $50 uniform allotment per year for boots.
  • The KAA has a yearly appreciation and awards banquet.
  • It also sponsors educational opportunities such as De-Escalation Training and Stop the Bleed instruction as they become available.

In an article posted earlier this month on Zip06.com (https://www.zip06.com/news/20190711/iino-we-need-to-start-now), Killingworth First Selectwoman Cathy Iino addressed the advantages of becoming an emergency responder. But she also explained that ‘finding volunteers to staff these services is increasingly difficult,” saying that “long-range challenges” loom for Killingworth and surrounding communities if that trend continues.

So what to do? The KAA has a solution, and it begins in three weeks.

“Just try it,” said Jess Accetta, a Killingworth Ambulance EMT from Clinton. “It’s a lot of hard work and commitment. Not everyone wants to get up at 2 in the morning (to answer a call). But if you have the passion for compassion and the drive to help others around you, this is the right place to be.”

KAA’s Clifton praised for emergency response

At last October’s annual Killingworth Ambulance Association banquet, Mark Clifton was honored as the EMT who responded to the most calls the previous year. This month he was honored again … but not for responding to a call.

For responding to a calling.

A member of the Killingworth Ambulance Association board of directors and director of Deer Lake Camp, Clifton was commended in an email the KAA received this week from a paramedic who assisted in a call where a patient ultimately died (you can find it in the Testimonials section under “About Us” in our website index).

“A difficult and sad situation,” wrote Middlesex Health’s Gary Johnson.

It happened last month when a father and his 24-year-old son asked Mark and wife Patty if they could fish at Deer Lake. It wasn’t an unusual request. The father, who lived in Branford, had known the Cliftons for 10 years, and his son, who lived in Georgia, was on his way to a military boot camp and wanted to spend one of his last free weekends fishing with his Dad.

And so he did. Unfortunately, what should have been a joyous morning turned tragic when the father collapsed and 911 was called.

And that’s where Clifton comes in.

On his way to emergency call taken only minutes before, he received word that urgent help was needed at the Deer Lake location he just left. He didn’t know who or what was involved. He simply knew he had to continue to his destination — which he did, finding a full crew from the KAA there when he arrived.

So he returned immediately to Deer Lake, helping a Madison Ambulance team on the scene in first finding the son and his father and then driving his Land Rover to a remote location at the north end of Deer Lake to ferry the patient through the woods to an awaiting ambulance.

“Otherwise,” Clifton said, “they would have had a half-mile carry-out.”

But that’s not what caught Johnson’s attention. This is: After the father was hurried away, Clifton drove the son to the Shoreline Medical Center in Westbrook (“I could tell he needed someone,” Clifton said). It was there that the distraught young man was told his father had passed away and there that Clifton spent an estimated five hours consoling him and assisting with phone calls to relatives.

“I didn’t want to leave the clinic with him until he had come to grips with his Dad’s death and gone to see him,” Clifton said, struggling to control his emotions. “The son said, ‘It’s so nice of you to be here.’ And I told him, ‘If the situation were reversed, your Dad would be here.’ We didn’t leave the hospital until he said he was ready.”

Afterward, Clifton offered to feed the young man dinner and house him overnight, but he declined.

“Mark came down to Shoreline,” Johnson wrote in his email to the KAA, “spending several hours with the patient’s son, keeping him company and being a support. For most, the job would have been done back at the scene. Not Mark. He spent the afternoon helping this young man, showing much compassion and empathy.

“Your agency should be proud to have a member as dedicated and caring as Mark.”

Thanks to DOT for tree removal

The Killingworth Ambulance Association would like to thank the Connecticut DOT, Tylerville office, for removing a dead red oak tree in front of the KAA’s headquarters on Route 81. The response was quick and the job thorough.

KAA scholarship winners honored

Pictured above (L-R): KAA scholarship winners Mikayla Nuhn, Brianna Shipman, Kyra Figuerelli and Emily Jennings. (Not present: Brianna Livingston). 

For the second consecutive year, five Haddam-Killingworth High School seniors are recipients of Killingworth Ambulance Association scholarships.

Emily Jennings, Kyra Figuerelli, Brianna Livingston, Brianna Shipman and Mikayla Nuhn were honored Tuesday at Haddam-Killingworth High’s 2019 senior awards night, with all but Livingston present for the awards and all but Shipman planning to pursue careers in nursing.

The KAA annually grants scholarships to high-school seniors who reside in Killingworth, have been accepted to a two-or-four-year colleges, plan to major in the medical, emergency services or allied fields and have GPAs of 3.0 or better.

The five honored Tuesday checked all those boxes, and the roll call, please:

EMILY JENNINGS – Emily will attend Rivier University, where the second largest major is nursing. And that’s precisely what she intends to pursue. A member of the Haddam-Killingworth volleyball team, she says that during her high-school career she recognized the importance of obtaining a health-care degree in college. And so she will pursue a Bachelor’s of Nursing, with the hope of becoming a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit or Labor-and-Delivery Nurse.

KYRA FIGUERELLI – Kyra is a prospective nursing student who plans to attend SUNY College at Brockport next fall. Kyra completed hours of community service by volunteering at the Killingworth Congregational Church and the town library and with programs within the Haddam-Killingworth Middle and High Schools. A USA Junior Olympic gymnast the past 12 years, Kyra says she was inspired by her mother, who, as an elementary teacher, touched the lives of children. Kyra is hoping she can … and will … do the same as a nurse.

BRIANNA LIVINGSTON – Brianna plans on majoring in nursing at Mt. St. Joseph, and, like Emily Jennings and Kyra Figuerelli, wants to work with children … and she knows just how much. That’s because she put in over 200 hours of community service in her high-school career, including an internship the past year at the Westbrook ER. It was there, she said, that she decided to pursue pediatric nursing because “it made me excited for the next chapter of my life.”

BRIANNA SHIPMAN – The past four years Brianna has been associated with the Killingworth Volunteer Fire Company – which is just across the parking lot from the KAA. In fact, she’s president of the Junior Volunteer Fire Company. Following in the footsteps of her father, who’s been a volunteer firefighter and EMT for 35 years, Brianna hopes to pursue a career as a firefighter paramedic. She spent over 300 hours volunteering at the Fire Company and is on her way to study at the University of New Haven.

MIKAYLA NUHN – Mikayla also accumulated over 300 hours of community service and plans to major in nursing at Endicott College. That should come as no surprise to anyone who knows her. Hospitalized as a child, Mikayla remembers how patient and compassionate nurses were – saying that they “inspired me not only to go into nursing later in life … but to aspire to be just like them.” Mikayla wants to have the same impact on children, mostly because she said she knows — first-hand — what they’re experiencing.

A sixth recipient, Grace Murphy, was awarded a scholarship late this week at Mercy High School. Grace completed over 200 hours of community service, including mission trips with Mercy and St. Peter’s Church.

The Killingworth Ambulance Association would like to congratulate all recipients and wish them the best of luck with their careers.

Value of KAA’s “Stop the Bleed” extends to Town Hall

(Photo above: The KAA’s Mark Clifton demonstrates how to make tourniquets out of clothing at a recent “Stop the Bleed” class) 

For the past two years, the Killingworth Ambulance Association has been preaching the value of its “Stop the Bleed” classes. But now it has tangible evidence.

Cathy Iino’s right hand.

Killingworth’s First Selectwoman sliced her right thumb this spring while using a knife on a cutting board. It wasn’t a serious accident, but there was enough bleeding that she sought immediate medical attention and required stitches.

“Most people who cut themselves with a knife,” she said, “would be holding the knife in their dominant hand and cut the other hand. Of course, I wasn’t doing that. I was pretty mad at myself.”

Nevertheless, she knew what to do. Having taken a “Stop the Bleed” class in May, 2018, with other Town Hall officials, she knew how to respond.

“Raise the arm and press hard,” she said, holding her bandaged hand over her head. “And don’t panic.”

Iino’s experience is an illustration of the importance of the “Stop the Bleed” program. A nationwide awareness campaign (www.bleedingcontrol.org) launched in 2015 by the White House and Department of Homeland Security, “Stop the Bleed” is designed to empower bystanders with the training to deal with traumatic events and emergency bleeding situations before help arrives.

“You just don’t know when something’s going to happen,” said Don McDougal, a “Stop the Bleed” instructor and member of the KAA’s board of directors. “And it could happen anywhere. You don’t know when you might be driving down the road and come upon an accident … and you’re the first one there.”

The KAA first offered “Stop the Bleed” classes in July, 2017, making Killingworth the first Connecticut town to have its citizens certified. Since that time it has conducted 18 classes, including two in May (“Stop the Bleed Month”), with another scheduled for Wednesday, June 12, at the Killingworth Library.

The class lasts approximately one hour and is free and open to the public.

And the public has responded. Students have ranged in age from the early teens to late 70s, with groups that include the Killingworth Volunteer Fire Company, the Lions Club, Girl Scouts, local library, Haddam-Killingworth High-School staff and Community Emergency Response Team (CERT).

In fact, one day after Killingworth Fire members completed their class, they answered an emergency bleeding call where they used “Stop the Bleed” kits picked up 24 hours earlier. In another instance, a local resident who took a “Stop the Bleed” course used his kit to staunch bleeding in a dog that damaged its paw in a slamming door.

But the reach of Killingworth’s “Stop the Bleed” program doesn’t end at the town line. A New Britain resident this month contacted the KAA, expressed interest in the course and drove here to take the first of the two May classes.

“The response has been good,” said McDougal. “Of course, you’d always like to see more.”

Classes typically involve a power-point lecture, followed by hands-on skills stations that focus on applying pressure to simulated wounds and treating them with direct pressure, gauze packing and a tourniquet. According to the American College of Surgeons, there are 44,771 instructors in 95 countries and all 50 United States, with Connecticut ranking 21st in the U.S with 867 trainers.

“The idea,” said McDougal, “is to recognize when something is life-threatening and to know what to do when minutes are critical.”

For more information on “Stop the Bleed,” contact the Killingworth Ambulance Association at killingworthambulance.org or call (860) 663-2450.