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CPR Saves Dog, Humans
An off-duty
police officer who administered CPR to a dog not only saved the hound,
but indirectly the lives of humans a citizen's committee in Virginia
said.
During a visit
to Lake Anne near Reston, Va., with his family, police officer Lance Hamilton
administered mouth-to-snout resuscitation to his dog, Bailey, after the
dog was injured near a dock, the Centre View (Va.) Connection reported.
The dog was injured while in the water as he fetched a ball.
Hamilton held
the dog's mouth closed and breathed rescue breaths through the snout while
uncle Greg Dunphy gave chest compressions, reviving Bailey after about
a minute.
A veterinarian
who cared for Bailey said the dog was electrocuted and had water in his
lungs. An electrical problem on the dock was found soon after and fixed
before anyone else could be injured, the newspaper reported.
Russell Porter,
chairman of the Citizen's Advisory Committee, said Hamilton "indirectly
saved humans and that's why we thought it'd be nice to give him an award
from us."
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Copyright
2007 by United Press International.
All rights reserved.