>1 Memories... A local woman remembers life during wartime in the Army Nursing Corps. Pagel3-A. THE L ?i ?-?/?-.< / AX. / i / 17 y HO AG & SONS BOOK P.O. BOX 162 SF'R I NGF'ORT M I lt%ll V Committee Of 100 Marks Year Three directors are re-elected, and the state treasurer encourages industrial growth in Brunswick County. Page11-C. TRAINING COORDINATOR BLAMED FOR DEFICIENCIES EA.4C p.? Ti~. Qs A rJ? /nn^"?rl / i-fo Qi innnrf C/VIJ rUf Lt?U IU JUOfJUi iu /-iuvuiiwu 1 BY ERIC CARLSON Brunswick County Emergency Medical Services Tuesday suspended its fledgling Advanced Life Support program after learning that its training coordinator had failed to keep proper certification records and had "grossly misled" officials about the status of emergency medical technician training. As a result, county rescue personnel are prohibited from installing breathing tubes, connecting intravenous fluid injections or dcfibrillaiing patients en route to the hospital. They will also be prohibited from using expen sive equipment purchased especially for the program. It is a situation that state and local EMS officials ad mit could result in the unnecessary death o? a patient The action came after the N.C. Office of Emergency Medical Services discovered that Brunswick EMS Training Coordinator John Davis had failed to keep the proper records to assure that local rescue personnel had completed the necessary course work and field training for advanced EMT-I certification. In a letter sent to the N.C. Office of Emergency Medical Services Friday, Brunswick County EMS Medical Director Dr. Harry L. Johnson said Davis "will no longer be involved in, our program in any way, and I would hope thai he will never be allowed to be a part of ojiv PM? nrrwmm in North Carolina " ? I cr- vrx.xi ? State law requires that every county must provide am bulance service staffed by personnel with at least a basic Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) rating. With such training, a rescuer can administer basic first aid, do cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), control hemor rhaging and perform other ambulancc-relatcd duties. Brunswick County had only EMT-certified personnel in its rescue squads until March, when it qualified for the Advanced Life Support designation. Under the ALS program, regulated by the N.C. Mcdical Care Commission and supervised by a local medical director. a county EMS system can utilize per sonnel with the EMT-I (intermediate) rating. After train ing and certification, EMT-l's can perform more exten sive surgical procedures to stabilize a patient. While training for that certification, an EMT-D rating can be earned, allowing a rescuer to operate a defibrillat ing unit. Under the direction of Johnson and county EMS Supervisor Doug Ledgelt, a EMT-I certification pro gram was established at Brunswick Community College (See ADVANCED, Page 2-A) Robinson Fired From County Post nv I?nfr< r* A DV CAM U M Liixiv. v