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Posted: Feb 27, 2018

San Francisco Fire Department sees spike in breast cancer rate

The department says approximately 16 percent of its firefighters are women. Of that number, 15 percent of female firefighters between 40 and 50 years old have been diagnosed with breast cancer, which is six times the national average.

"Cancer is a concern for the San Francisco Fire Department as well as the fire service nationwide. But in San Francisco, we have seen and we do have numbers of elevated cancer rates for male and female firefighters," said Jeanine Nicholson, deputy chief of administration for the San Francisco Fire Department.

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Posted: Feb 27, 2018

Fire Station Back Open in North Scranton

The kitchen and doors were damaged.

While repairs were made, Truck #4 was moved to another fire station in the city.

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Posted: Feb 27, 2018

New Hybrid Fire/Ladder Truck To Reduce Palm Beach's Operational Costs

The Town Council approved Tuesday the purchase of a new aerial ladder truck and a pumper truck at a combined cost of $1,079,613. Deputy Fire Chief Darrel Donatto told the council that the two trucks will save the town more than $5 million over 15 years by eliminating the use of a third truck and the need for three firefighter posts.

The two new trucks will be stationed at the Central Fire Station, where they will replace three vehicles — a ladder truck and two fire engines, Donatto said. The station can shift from three trucks to two because one of the new trucks is a hybrid fire engine/ladder truck, he said.

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Posted: Feb 27, 2018

Houston (TX) FD Ambulance Fleet In 'Deplorable' Condition

A 2016 study, commissioned by the city of Houston, found the department is 70 ambulances short of being able to attain the national response time standard of 90 percent of arrival times falling within eight minutes.

Administrators said Monday that the ambulance fleet did not have serious issues, but hea

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Posted: Feb 27, 2018

How a Florida paramedic’s split-second decision may have saved a student’s life after mass shooting

As Madeleine Wilford bled out from multiple gunshot wounds outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the first responder struggling to keep her alive was faced with a choice. Coral Springs Fire Department Lt. Laz Ojeda could follow guidance to rush the high school student to a hospital 30 miles away, where policy dictates most child patients should go.
- PUB DATE: 2/27/2018 12:00:00 AM - SOURCE: Tampa Bay Times and Tampa Bay.com
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