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Angels in the SnowPublished: February 3, 2003by: Holly St. Lifer
By that time the walls, ceilings and carpets were in flames. "I knew to drop to my knees and follow the wall," Marteney says. "I couldn't see a foot in front of my face and it hurt to breathe." Undaunted, Marteney found the boy huddled behind the bathroom door and rushed him out to safety. For most teens, the decision to run into a burning building could be a costly one. But Marteney is trained to save lives. She's a member of the Dragon Slayers, an all-girl firefighting and emergency medical team in Aniak, Alaska. A landlocked village of 750 people, Aniak is surrounded by rivers; the nearest major city is Anchorage, 350 miles west. With 160 hours of combined emergency trauma and firefighting training, the Dragon Slayers respond to about 300 calls a year, servicing an area of 14 villages with 3,000 residents. Team members have rescued survivors of plane crashes and snowmobile accidents. They have revived loved ones who have overdosed and grandmothers in cardiac arrest. Just this past December, they began a search that is still underway to find the body of a 15-year-old boy who fell through the ice and drowned.
Anything Boys Can Do According to Brown, everyone knew there was a tremendous need for an expanded EMS team. "In one month, we were able to raise $3,000 through community dances, raffles and local business donationsenough to train 12 people and buy basic emergency medical equipment," Brown says.
As soon as they were up and running, the response was overwhelming. "To give you an idea of the enormous demand," Brown says, "In the first year, we jumped from 25 calls to 250." The eight adults in the department couldn't handle it all so Brown started recruiting high school kids, mostly girls.
Why weren't boys interested? "Male supremacy is still big out here in Eskimo culture," Brown says. "The boys also resist the military-like aspect of the department." There's strict criteria for staying on board: Members have to make 90 percent of the meetingsongoing training that takes place twice a week for two hours. Tobacco, alcohol and drugs are prohibited. And although these high school heroines are on call 24/7, they have to maintain passing grades. Brown makes it clear that the girls' level of training and competency is on par with adults. He goes out on every call with the Dragon Slayers, and he is selective about what each girl actually does on each call based on experience and age. Still, it's obviously a job with risks. Are the girls ever scared? "The only thing that scares you is the sound of the pager startling you at three in the morning," says 17-year-old Erica Kameroff, who joined the crew as a sophomore. "But the adrenalin takes over. You don't think about anything but doing whatever has to be done, whether it's medical or fire."
Putting Emotion Aside Getting to the victims in arctic Aniakmost of whom, like the Dragon Slayers, are Yupik Eskimos and Athabascan Indiansis far more challenging than hopping into an ambulance and driving to the scene. Through early May, the team uses frozen waterways as roads, traveling in snowmobiles and four-wheelers. When the ice melts, they often rely on boats. "And here, members of the team almost always know the person who's injured or sick. So it's very personal. There's an emotional aspect to knowing the victim your whole life that you don't have in a larger city," Hess says.
A particularly difficult call for Marteney was treating a good friend who overdosed on ibuprofen. "It was pretty hard to see him like that, but you learn to put your emotions aside and use your training to help the person," Marteney says. "It's not until afterward that your emotions kick in." Another overdose victim was the mother of one of the Dragon Slayers. "As hard as that was, we needed everyone on the call," says Brown, who incorporates grief management into the training. "After we have a really hard call we all meet at the fire station. We talk about the person we may have lost, what happened on the call, what we did right," says Marteney. "Then we do a group hug and go for a walk. It really helps."
A World of Opportunities
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Holly St. Lifer is a writer and television producer specializing in issues concerning parents, children and media.
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