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Ambulance Crash Data
2006 and earlier

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Ambulance Crash Log


Second Anchorage Fire Department ambulance crash closes highway - Indian, Alaska
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For the second day in a row, an Anchorage Fire Department ambulance has been involved in a wreck while transporting a patient.

On Friday afternoon the Girdwood community based ambulance was traveling between Girdwood and Anchorage when it crashed on the Seward Highway while transporting a victim from a separate vehicle accident. The crash was at milepost 103 on the Seward Highway near Indian around 2 p.m.

Paramedic Terry Kadel was in the back of the ambulance treating the woman from the first accident. "The first thing we noticed was the medic rig brake," he said. "As soon as I felt that, I sat down and knew something was happening. You shouldn't be going down the highway and suddenly feel the medic unit brake."

He then felt the collision and was thrown back as the ambulance spun 180 degrees, he said.

Kadel said the ambulance was traveling about 55 mph on the highway with its lights flashing and the siren blaring when a Nissan Pathfinder in the oncoming lane slid on the icy road into the ambulance's lane. Troopers say the driver of the Pathfinder, 27-year-old Harry William Whitaker, had tried to obey traffic law by slowing his vehicle and pulling off the highway when he saw the ambulance. The brakes locked on the slick road, and his vehicle spun out of control.

The medics and driver of the ambulance were not injured. Kadel and fellow medic Wayne Stalcup treated Whitaker for a hand injury when they got out of their damaged ambulance. Whitaker was later transported by another ambulance to Alaska Regional Hospital. He was the only occupant of the vehicle, which was destroyed in the accident.

The female patient who had been in the first car crash had been strapped to a backboard and belted in during the second wreck.

Troopers said no citations were issued for the collision.

A 10-year veteran of the job, Kadel said this was the first time he was in an ambulance accident. "I'm always very aware every time we are traveling with lights and sirens that we could always be in an accident. It's a very high-risk job that we do. Lights and sirens are dangerous."

The wrecked closed the highway for about an hour. Alaska State Troopers say drivers should expect snarled traffic into the late afternoon as clean-up crews continue to work the scene.

On Thursday morning, three medics were injured when a Dodge pickup collided with an Anchorage Fire Department ambulance as it was driving out of Mountain View toward Airport Heights Drive.

Video


Dec 29, 2006, 20:06
 


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