Qwasie Reid: US paramedic suspended without pay for helping child who was choking

The New York City EMT was transpotting an elderly patient to a hospital appointment when the ambulance was flagged down by a 'frantic man' in the street

Caroline Mortimer
Sunday 01 November 2015 18:25 GMT
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Qwasie Reid has been suspended without pay for violating company policy forbidding "unauthorised stops"
Qwasie Reid has been suspended without pay for violating company policy forbidding "unauthorised stops" (Fox News/YouTube)

A US paramedic has reportedly been suspended without pay for making an "unauthorised" stop to try to save the life of a choking little girl.

Qwasie Reid, an EMT (Emergency Medical Technician) in New York City, was transporting a nursing home patient to a doctor’s appointment in an ambulance last week when he was flagged down by a "frantic man" near a Brooklyn school who said a student was choking.

Ignoring his partner’s advice to stay in the ambulance, he went to help the seven-year-old who had reportedly started choking while eating a sandwich.

According to WABC-TV, Mr Reid "cleared out the little girl's mouth, put an oxygen mask on her, used a defibrillator and started CPR."

Mr Reid told the TV station that the girl, Noelia Echavarria, was already "blue in the face and lips" when he got there but that no one at the school had administered first aid.

He said he was subequently suspended without pay by his employer, Assist Ambulance.Company, because the firm's policy forbids paramedics from making any unauthorised stops.

Noelia Echavarria died in hospital three days after the incident (TopTipNews/YouTube)

Mr Reid said although he was worried he could get fired he would "do it again" because he believed in that moment the choking girl took priority over the elderly patient who was being looked at by his partner.

He told DNAinfo: "As an EMT, I don’t care about your money.

"There was a child choking. I’m worried about them firing me, but I did a good deed. I just feel like I’m being penalised for something and I haven’t done anything wrong."

The New York fire department arrived at the school a few minutes after Mr Reid and began to administer CPR.

Noelia was rushed to hospital on 21 October but died in hospital on 23 October after doctors turned off life support.

Assist Ambulance has so far not responded to local media’s requests for comment.

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