Beverly Firefighters Fill Support Roles in Middleton Explosion
3/13/2011
Beverly Fire Department Firefighters responded to the Middleton Explosion in several support roles on March 13. The first function was directly to the scene as Truck 2 and Car 2 responded to the Bostik facility to aid Middleton and other Fire Departments working to control the fire and lessen the impact on the local community. The second role began when injured victims from the explosion were being transported to Beverly Hospital. It was at Beverly Hospital where Firefighters were dispatched to set up a mobile Mass Decontamination Unit (MDU) in preparation for decontamination of victims and responders taken to Beverly Hospital from the incident scene.
Engines 1 and 3 were dispatched to the hospital where they met two additional firefighters and set up the MDU which is used to get contaminated materials off of both ambulatory and non-ambulatory victims. In the case of the Middleton explosion, the number of contaminated injured that needed to be transported to Beverly Hospital was fairly small. In total, 4 non ambulatory victims were washed inside the tent for treatment in the Beverly Hospital Emergency Room.
The MDU has been assigned to the Beverly Fire Department for nearly a decade. Firefighters conduct training in its setup and operation annually in the hopes that it will never have to be used. Additionally, the Department has conducted joint exercises with the hospital and local businesses in the past. Fortunately, tonight’s incident was on a far smaller scale than the use of the tent was initially designed. Tonight, the training and exercises paid off as the system worked as planned.
The tent is comprised of three sections. The first is where victims remove their contaminated clothing, the second is the wash station with corridors for people that can wash themselves as well as a corridor where a team of hospital personnel can perform decontamination on victims that are unable to decontaminate themselves. In tonight’s case, the hospital personnel decontaminated all four victims inside the MDU while firefighters set up and operated the equipment.
In addition to the tent sections, the MDU consists of a water heater, generator, lighting and a system for collecting the hazardous runoff from the decontamination process.
Once all of the victims were decontaminated, the “clean” equipment was broken down but the potentially contaminated equipment was left under watch until arrangements for cleanup could be made.
|