The Denver Post

Frantic effort to save daughter

- By John Rogers

LOS ANGELES» A woman franticall­y asks an emergency dispatcher to coach her on how to perform CPR during a 911 call as she and others desperatel­y struggle in vain to save the life of Olympic skier Bode Miller’s 19-monthold daughter, Emeline, after the toddler fell into a swimming pool.

“Yes, hurry. HURRY,” the woman shouts at the beginning of the call released Tuesday.

Asked by a male dispatcher what the emergency is, she tells him a 19month-old girl fell into a backyard pool, is not breathing and has no pulse.

“We don’t know,” the woman, who sounds near tears, replies when asked how long the girl was in the water.

“Are you doing CPR or do you need me to coach you through it?,” he asks.

“Coach me through it, please,” she replies. Neither her voice nor others heard on the call are identified.

“I have a small pulse. I have a small pulse,” a man says urgently at one point. “I need an oxygen machine here. Like, now.”

“OK. They’re coming as fast as they can,” the dispatcher replies as he continues to give instructio­ns.

“Come on, Emmy. Come on, baby girl,” the woman pleads.

As the minutes tick off, the man swears as he asks where the ambulance is.

“They’re on their way. They’ve been on their way for several minutes. OK? They’re just about there. They’re right there on the street,” he says shortly before emergency sirens are heard.

Paramedics continued to try to revive the girl as they rushed her to a hospital, said Capt. Tony Bommarito of the Orange County Fire Authority, which released the 911 call.

There have been 13 drownings in Orange County this year, according to statistics released Tuesday by the agency. Three involved children under 5, while other victims were 15 or older.

The fire authority reposted its rules for staying safe in the water on its Facebook page Tuesday. Among them are always having adult supervisio­n at pools where children are present, keeping pools behind a barricade that includes a locked gate and knowing CPR.

Miller, who lives in Coto de Caza, is the most decorated male U.S. skier with 33 World Cup wins, two overall titles, four world championsh­ips and six Olympic medals, including gold at the 2010 Vancouver Games in the supercombi­ned. At the 2014 Sochi games, he was the oldest alpine skier — at age 36 — to win a medal.

Since retiring from skiing, he has worked as an NBC sports analyst. His wife, Morgan, is a profession­al volleyball player.

On Tuesday, Miller posted a recent photograph of himself holding his blond daughter, along with the message, “Thank you for all the love and support.”

In a previous post he said, “Never in a million years did we think we would experience a pain like this,” adding that Emeline’s love and spirit would never be forgotten.

Miller and his wife have three other children.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States