A tragic accident that ALL event managers can learn from

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This year's Chicago Marathon was faced with a tremendous weather challenge. The overwhelming heat and humidity caused many problems for the runners. In fact, the race was shut down about 3 hours into the race meaning most runners were not allowed to finished half the race.

Tragically a runner who suffered a heat related injury was picked up by a suburban ambulance service. Because of the size and scope of the event, using additional medical personnel was a very good idea. However, this ambulance was not given proper instruction to where they should deliver injured runners. The ambulance got lost while trying to get to the hospital and the runner died.

As event managers, this should not happen. The athlete and spectator's welfare must be the highest priority. The fact that the ambulance did not have the correct information is inexcuseable.

Doomed runner was six blocks from hospital

Updated: October 24, 2007, 3:12 PM ET

CHICAGO -- The ambulance crew who picked up a dying runner during the Chicago Marathon apparently got lost on the way to a hospital, authorities said.

Chad Schieber collapsed while running the Oct. 7 race, and was about six blocks away from the University of Illinois at Chicago Medical Center. An autopsy blamed his death on a heart condition called mitral valve prolapse, though heart experts say the condition is rarely dangerous.

Schieber, 35, was picked up from the marathon route by an ambulance from Niles, one of 30 suburban crews called to help when hundreds of runners were stricken by that day's hot weather.

The crew radioed Chicago dispatchers Schieber was in full cardiac arrest and said they planned to take him to the UIC Medical Center, Chicago Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford said this week.

The ambulance crew drove a couple blocks in the wrong direction, then flagged down a city ambulance and got instructions, said Niles Fire Chief Barry Mueller. But then they drove past the UIC Medical Center because they couldn't find the emergency room entrance.

They ended up delivering Schieber to the West Side Veterans Administration Hospital a few blocks away. The hospital is not part of Chicago's emergency response network but has a fully working emergency room, officials said.

Langford and Mueller could not say how long it took to take Schieber, a police officer from Midland, Mich., to the hospital or whether it would have helped Schieber if he had arrived sooner.

Krystn Madrine, Schieber's sister-in-law, said the family is waiting for more information.

"We want to see what happens," Madrine told The Associated Press on Wednesday. "We hope that something good will come of Chicago's discovering that they did not do a very good job."

Marathon officials declined to comment Wednesday.

The lost ambulance was first reported Monday by WBBM-TV, which also said emergency dispatchers didn't have maps of marathon road closures. Dispatchers could be heard shouting over radios "We need maps! We have no maps down here," WBBM reported.

Mueller said the crew had asked dispatchers for directions but got no response.

"That's not unusual; the airwaves could be jammed," Mueller said.

Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press

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This page contains a single entry by Mark Dodds published on October 24, 2007 3:41 PM.

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