Chattanooga Times Free Press

COOL UNDER PRESSURE

12-YEAR-OLD GIRL HONORED FOR HEROIC ACTIONS

- By EMMETT GIENAPP / STAFF WRITER

If you’re going to have a medical emergency while driving through a busy intersecti­on, you’d better hope someone like 12-year-old Serenity Russell is around to lend a helping hand.

On April 20, she showed first responders and a handful of other adults how to keep cool under pressure when her mother, Roni Mothershea­d, had a seizure while driving on Gunbarrel Road. Russell kept calm, put the car in park and took charge of the scene, telling bystanders to call for help.

Paramedics and firefighte­rs celebrated her actions on Friday and, as an added bonus, brought out a cake because the incident happened on her birthday.

“When responders arrived on scene, Serenity had taken control of the scene and really displayed some heroic actions,” said Chattanoog­a Fire Department Chief Phil Hyman. “Her mother was having a medical issue and they were right in the middle of an intersecti­on, a dangerous intersecti­on, and Serenity really snapped into action.

“She displayed just an inordinate amount of calmness during that entire event, like nothing was going on. Twelve-year-old Serenity is the kind of person we love to have in our community. She did an outstandin­g job.”

Hamilton County EMS Director Ken Wilkerson echoed Hyman and gave Russell a blue ribbon certificat­e, an honor usually reserved for paramedics who do something outstandin­g in the line of duty.

“Serenity stepped up and gave us something that we sorely need — that’s a little extra time. She was the first responder on that scene,” Wilkerson said. “She took charge, all at the ripe old age of barely turning 12 that day.”

Mothershea­d said the incident is fuzzy from the time she pulled up to the intersecti­on to when the paramedics arrived, but she’s immensely proud of her daughter.

“We pulled up at the intersecti­on and, of course, I ended up having a seizure and she put the car in park and kept me still and everything and called for help,” she said. “To see her recognized like this is an amazing feeling.”

Russell, who wants to be either an artist or a basketball player when she grows up, said she was nervous as everything happened, but she knew exactly what to do because she’s taken care of her mother before.

She said her mother started scooting out of her seat so she held her head still, asked someone to call for help, and got someone to bring cool water, which she dumped on her jacket and put on her mother’s forehead.

“It made me kind of nervous because it was in the car,” she said. “She has had seizures before where I’ve taken care of her so I know what to do. She’s my mom and I love her.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? Hamilton County EMS director Ken Wilkerson shakes the hand of Serenity Russell, 12, who was honored for preventing further harm to her mother during in a traffic accident. Her mother, Roni Mothershea­d, is seen, back center.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER Hamilton County EMS director Ken Wilkerson shakes the hand of Serenity Russell, 12, who was honored for preventing further harm to her mother during in a traffic accident. Her mother, Roni Mothershea­d, is seen, back center.

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