Trending Topics

Denver paramedics deploy to wildfires to treat, assist firefighters

Denver Health teams are prepared to go to the frontlines to help injured firefighters

By Bill Carey
EMS1

DENVER — When a wildfire begins, medical professionals join firefighters to assist injured personnel.

At Denver Health, 16 paramedics and eight communications officers on the Wildland Team are on standby, ready to be deployed by the National Interagency Fire Center, 9 News reported.

“We’re ready for it. We’re prepared for it,” said Denver Health Fire Line Paramedic Logan Opalinski said. “We obviously have the ability and the structure to treat and transport really anything that we need to.”

Opalinski was deployed to Pueblo weeks ago to assist crews fighting the Oak Ridge Fire, working directly on the front lines.

“We can go with hot shots. They’re elite. They’re essentially athletes. We can go with smoke jumpers,” Denver Health Lieutenant Jay Starzynski said. “You can also be doing structure protection with someone who is driving the water tender.”

Currently, two Denver Health paramedics are on fire lines in Oregon and Wyoming, while a communications officer aids the Alexander Mountain Fire near Loveland.

Trending
A Muslim civil rights group alleges the Baltimore Fire Department denied religious accommodation, selectively enforced its grooming policy and suspended him without offering a respirator fit test
A Haynes Life Flight helicopter was approaching a landing zone in Autauga County when bullets struck the right-side window
Nearly a third of men aren’t exercising regularly, despite clear links to better mental health, sexual performance and energy levels — key concerns for EMS providers under stress
Three officers were killed and two others were critically wounded following a shooting in York County