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Fatal Kailua ambulance fire linked to oxygen device

CRAIG T. KOJIMA / CKOJIMA@ STARADVERTISER.COM
                                Deputy Director of Emergency Services Ian Santee demonstrates how a fatal fire could have occurred in ambulance on Wednesday.
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CRAIG T. KOJIMA / CKOJIMA@ STARADVERTISER.COM

Deputy Director of Emergency Services Ian Santee demonstrates how a fatal fire could have occurred in ambulance on Wednesday.

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                An ambulance caught fire in the driveway at Adventist Health Castle in Kailua on Aug. 24.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS

An ambulance caught fire in the driveway at Adventist Health Castle in Kailua on Aug. 24.

CRAIG T. KOJIMA / CKOJIMA@ STARADVERTISER.COM
                                Deputy Director of Emergency Services Ian Santee demonstrates how a fatal fire could have occurred in ambulance on Wednesday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                An ambulance caught fire in the driveway at Adventist Health Castle in Kailua on Aug. 24.

Preliminary findings from an investigation into an ambulance fire that killed a patient and injured a paramedic last month show the blaze originated in an oxygen device that is routinely used, officials said today.

The Aug. 24 fire killed 91-year-old patient Fred Kaneshiro of Waimanalo.and severely injured 36-year-old paramedic Jeff Wilkinson when flames engulfed the back of the ambulance in the parking lot of Adventist Health Castle in Kailua.

“Based on the preliminary findings of this investigation … the fire is classified as accidental and originated at the portable oxygen regulator assembly,” Honolulu Fire Chief Sheldon “Kalani” Hao said at a news conference. “The exact and definitive cause of this fire cannot be determined within the scope of the Honolulu Fire Department.”

Dr. Jim Ireland, Honolulu’s emergency services director, said the injured paramedic reported hearing a loud sound when he was connecting a breathing device called a CPAP, which stands for continuous positive airway pressure, to an oxygen source in the back of the ambulance.

“It is reported that at the time the paramedic connected the CPAP oxygen line to the portable oxygen cylinder, there was a sound described as a pop, followed by a bright flash of light with the back of the ambulance immediately filling with smoke and fire,” Ireland said.

>> PHOTOS: Ambulance fire linked to oxygen device

He said the emergency medical technician who was driving the ambulance reported hearing the same sound before the fire.

The city hired investigators from the Emergency Care Research Institute, a private, nonprofit firm that specializes in medical device evaluations, to help the fire department determine the cause of the fire.

Ireland said the investigation into what sparked the fire is ongoing and a final report will be issued once complete.

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