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Faulty Circuit Smokes Crabs

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Friday night excitement on Route 50

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Shawn J. Soper
News Editor

WEST OCEAN CITY — The commercial fire at the Waterman’s Seafood Company, leading to the evacuation of the crowded restaurant and closing a vast section of Route 50 in both directions for several hours on Friday, originated in a second-floor attic area and was caused by a faulty electrical circuit, the Worcester County Fire Marshal’s Office announced on Tuesday.

 
The fire was reported around 6:45 p.m. on Friday and first-arriving units from the Ocean City Fire Company reported fire extending from the roof area of the two-and-half story landmark restaurant on Route 50 in West Ocean City. The restaurant was open and crowded at the height of the dinner rush on a busy Friday evening, but the evacuation was orderly, if not all that fast, according to a source at the scene, but employees and guests got out and no one was injured.
 
read rest of the story HERE.
 
Lower Eastern Shore news posted this picture prior to fire department arrival:
 
 
Maryland Coast Dispatch photo:
 
 
 
Mike "FossilMedic" Ward
 

da’ Shore has a great Memorial Day flush

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Biggest Demoflush Since 1992!

When dinosaurs staffed Dodge Type II, Suburban and Cadillac ambulances, the Town of Ocean City's implemented a unique measurement of weekend crowds: 

Demoflush.

Estimating resort weekend population based on the amount of sewage generated is a unique Ocean City tradition.

It started in 1971 as the city struggled to develop a health services plan for a narrow penninsula resort that went from 1,493 permanent residents to summer weekends with 50,000 to 250,000 visitors.

A 1973 seminar in Operations Research in Health Planning included reports on the Ocean City project:

The statistics yielded by the surveys were detailed by Peter G. Goldschmidt, also a graduate student at Johns Hopkins. (he went on to become a physician and PhD)

A clinic operated by a local physician with summer assistants provided most of the care for the visitors; the clinic saw about 160 patients on an average August day but was forced to turn away another 20.

Of every 1000 accidents or episodes of illness reported in the survey, only about 200 cases were actually treated and carried to the point of discharge; the rest either did not seek care, were unable to obtain it, or did not follow up on the initial visit.

Visits from permanent residents were found to make up 20 percent of all visits in 1971; this was projected to increase to 35 percent in 1980, with planned development of the area, and the summer population by that date was projected to increase to 300,000. Apart from accidental injuries, the major complaints reported were "nervous anxiety" and high blood pressure.

On completion of the study, the team recommended immediate establishment of first-aid stations on the beach and the development of a disaster plan for the area, with all health activities to be coordinated by a health care corporation in order to provide continuity of service the year round. The city council endorsed the plan and charged the medical commission to carry it out.

Two first-aid stations, staffed by nurses and aides, were opened the following summer and handled 1600 calls for service, most of which did not require physician care.

The health care corporation was established but is still without a staff; political realities intervened with the discovery that the health care of the summer visitors had low priority on community funds raised from the permanent residents, and efforts to raise funds from other sources have so far been unsuccessful.

More here: Operations Research in Health Planning (1973)

During that time a "rogue" physician established a clinic near the convention center, complete with a private ambulance that never moved from it's perch on the corner of his lot.

In 1974 the town had one Maryland Cardiac Rescue Technician on the job. Frank Muller took one of the first CRT classes in Baltimore. The nearest hospital was 30 miles away in Salisbury. We transported to a clinic in order to stabilize patients before the 45 minute transport.

Our operating medical director (OMD) taught us to set up ekgs, start IVs and do minor suturing when we brought patients into his clinic. It was just-in-time training as the need arose. We worked under his direct supervision, supplementing a thin clinic staff.

The OMD taught me how to set up an EKG after transporting a large, panic-strickened, 40-something guy with chest pain who was profusely sweating and slick with suntan lotion.  The patient arrested in the clinic and did not get to Penninsula General Hospital. My first time using a defibrillator.

Peter G. Goldschmidt and Andrew W. Dahl published the results of their work.  "Estimating Population in Seasonal Resort Communities" published in the April 1976 issue of growth and change: A Journal of Urban and Regional Policy

Tex Jobe, US Army Corps of Engineers photo, June 1998 via Wikipedia

Joan Shriner, writing in Friday's Maryland Coast Dispatch provided the details:

According to (Town of Ocean City) Communications Manager Donna Abbott, this year’s demoflush population calculations for the holiday weekend saw an estimated 281,895 people, which is well over last year’s estimate for Memorial Day weekend, which was set at 254,717.

“I have demoflush figures back to 1992 and I could not find a higher demoflush estimate for Memorial weekend then what we just had this past weekend,” Abbott said.

read more here: Holiday Weekend Gets Season Off To Booming Start

Memorial Day Crowds

  • 2011: 281,895
  • 2010: 254,717
  • 2009: 270,421
  • 2008: 226,748
  • 2007: 259,823
  • 2006: 239,789
  • 2005: 216,371
  • 2004: 242,286
  • 2003: 197,725
  • 2002: 237,791
  • 2001: 216,038
  • 2000: 242,730
  • 1999: 248,446
  • 1998: 234,961
  • 1997: 204,972

Demoflush figures courtesy of Ocean City Tourism.

Ocean City is the second largest city in Maryland on summer weekends.

Mike "FossilMedic" Ward

Related post: August 21, 2007 Beach Patrol First Responders

Beach Patrol First Responders

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Thirty some summers ago I worked as a seasonal EMT for the Town of Ocean City Maryland.

Back then the fire station at 102 Dorchester Street had the dispatch office. Beach Patrol headquarters was about two blocks south.

We first knew of an emergency on the beach when a powder blue Ford Pinto would rush from the Beach Patrol headquarters, with a small blinking red light on the roof and a tinny mechanical siren screaming from the left front fender.

Time would stretch to a quarter hour or longer before the ambulance received a request for service. Even with a room full of scanners and direct telephone lines at the fire station, we had no idea what was happening on the beachfront, since the beach patrol used semaphore flags.

Last Friday (August 17, 2007) , Maryland Coast Dispatch staff writer Ali Baker recounts a Fourth of July cardiac arrest on the beach with a profoundly different result. It shows the value of prompt first response within an interagency plan.

This link takes you to the article: AEDs Saving Lives On Ocean City Beach

There are three important parts to this story:

  • a donation
  • expanded first responder role
  • city-wide radio interoperability

The family of Roger L. Herrell donated $6000 to the Beach Patrol to purchase four automatic external defibrillators. This was in appreciation for the efforts of the Beach Patrol in the rescue attempt for Mr. Herrell in 1999.

There are 12 Beach Patrol AEDs distributed to the four patrol areas that make up the 10.5 miles of beachfront and carried on the all-terrain quad response vehicles.

The Ocean City Beach Patrol assists about 2,500 bathers in distress each season. Many of the surf rescues are cardiac emergencies caused by the bather struggling against the rip tide of the current.

In 2006, the Beach Patrol received the "Outstanding EMS Program Award" from the Maryland Institute for Emergency Medical Service Systems.

From the MIEMSS award narrative:

Like other first responders, the Beach Patrol often have to resuscitate people with CPR or the AED. Each of the 5 cardiac arrests that occurred on the beach or in the ocean last summer was successfully resuscitated.

In addition, last summer the Ocean City Beach Patrol gave first aid for 1,567 minor injuries; they worked with Ocean City Fire/EMS to treat 126 individuals who did not have life-threatening injuries but who required a paramedic response, and 105 patients with life-threatening injuries (mostly cervical spine injuries caused by body surfing or shallow water diving).

Cervical spine injuries require careful stabilization and tricky extraction from the ocean, as waves continue crashing. In addition, environmental conditions are often conducive to spinal injuries, resulting in several patients with spinal cord injuries having to be rescued in quick succession.

The Ocean City Beach Patrol has developed a technique for stabilizing and removing patients from the surf when spinal cord injuries are suspected. This technique was recently accepted as a state standard of care by MIEMSS, and the Beach Patrol has developed a video with MIEMSS to help train others in the techniques.

The third factor is a carefully grown 800 MHz trunked radio system that started in 1993.

Installed five miles inland for protection from hurricanes, the system placed all city agencies on one digital radio system. The system expanded in 2000 to include an emergency talk channel (Channel 9). Channel 9 is monitored every hour of every day by 911 dispatchers.

One of the five resuscitations in 2005 shows the value of radio interoperability. Beach Patrol Sergeant Tim Uebell was not on duty, but heard the dispatch for a person collapsed on the boardwalk on the EMS channel. Just a few blocks away, Sergeant Uebell was first to arrive and used one of the Herrell purchased AEDs to make a difference.

Related: June 06, 2011: da’ Shore has a great Memorial Day flush

Mike "FossilMedic" Ward