MrsMush99 said:Miner returns to West Virginia
Doctor: Improvement warrants moving survivor closer to home
Saturday, January 7, 2006; Posted: 9:37 p.m. EST (02:37 GMT)
PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (CNN) -- The sole survivor of a West Virginia mine explosion was dramatically improving Saturday as he struggled to fend off the carbon monoxide poisoning that killed his co-workers, a doctor said.
Meanwhile, doctors in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, said McCloy, 26, was transferred Saturday night to the West Virginia hospital where he was originally treated so he can be closer to his family.
Link
The last I heard, his organs hadn't yet returned to, what is considered, normal operation. Accoding to the doctor, he still has any number of medical problems that need to be addressed. It's a wait, and see, to see how complete his recovery will be.Marthatex said:It sounds encouraging that he's getting better quickly, and "significantly". Swallowing - that's hopeful. I guess it all depends on the affect of the carbon monoxide on his brain.
Marthatex said:It would be great to have one miracle in a terrible tragedy.
Let's just keep hoping for the best. It's a long road of recovery for Randy.indigomood said:MORGANTOWN, W.Va. - Mining disaster survivor Randal McCloy Jr. has been responding to stimuli, but has developed a slight fever and remains in critical condition, doctors said Monday.
"Randy has developed a fever, which is a common occurrence in any patient's intensive care course," he said. "This is almost an expected complication."
Doctors plan to start physical therapy later Monday to exercise McCloy's muscles and promote blood flow through his arms and legs, which appear to have become more reactive to stimulation.
Dr. Julian Bailes, a neurosurgeon at the hospital, said McCloy was still in a "moderate coma." Late Sunday, the hospital had said it was unclear whether sedatives had completely cleared McCloy's body.
"The best he has done is (responding to) localized pain something he doesn't like," Bailes said Monday. "He comes up to grab your hand."
He said it was still too early to make an accurate prognosis about McCloy's recovery, but his brain stem appears to be completely normal.
link to article
Oh dear God...how sad is that???T'sNana said:CEO: Mine passageway unblocked
By Tom Vanden Brook, USA TODAY
Wireless technology available today might have saved some of the 12 miners who died last week in a West Virginia mine, the chief executive of the mining company said Monday.
However, the coal industry has been slow to adopt wireless communication systems, he said.
AP file photo
Hatfield
International Coal Group CEO Ben Hatfield said things may have turned out differently had the miners known that the Jan. 2 explosion in the Sago Mine did not block the mine's passageway.
"Sadly, they could have come out and made it to safety," Hatfield said in an interview with USA TODAY.
More at link http://usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-01-09-mine-modernizing_x.htm
Linda7NJ said:Oh dear God...how sad is that???
Correct!Details said:Not a normal wireless call - wireless will not penetrate that kind of rock! Wireless equipment would need to be installed - and hopefully not too much destroyed by any explosion or collapse that happened when the phones were needed.
It's not just a simple matter of giving the miners a cell phone - if it were that easy, it would have already been done, or a miner would just have brought his own cell phone along.
Details said:Not a normal wireless call - wireless will not penetrate that kind of rock! Wireless equipment would need to be installed - and hopefully not too much destroyed by any explosion or collapse that happened when the phones were needed.
It's not just a simple matter of giving the miners a cell phone - if it were that easy, it would have already been done, or a miner would just have brought his own cell phone along.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.