Good Samaritan, quick thinking save baby on Miami expressway
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Drivers stuck in traffic on a聽Miami聽expressway on Thursday rushed to help a woman who got out of her car, holding a baby, and screaming for help.
Pamela Rauseo's nephew, 5-month-old Sebastian de la Cruz, wasn't breathing. The boy was born prematurely and has respiratory issues.
罢丑别听惭颈补尘颈听贬别谤补濒诲听 Lucila Godoy arrived first and helped perform CPR. Sweetwater police officer Amauris Bastidas took over the procedure when he arrived, while Ms. Rauseo breathed into the infant's mouth.
The聽baby聽briefly started breathing, then stopped again. The boy's aunt, the police officer, and the passerby worked frantically to get the聽baby聽to breathe. Miami聽Fire Rescue arrived soon after and took the聽baby聽to a hospital. According to the , the baby was listed Friday in critical, but stable, condition.
The story has a happy ending for everyone, including those who witnessed the life-saving efforts as they unfolded in bumper-to-bumper traffic. Al Diaz, a photographer for the Miami Herald, captured the rescue on film.
Infant CPR is considered easy to learn and use.聽
Good Samaritans come in all ages and can be found around the country. In March of 2013, two young boys in Marietta, Ga., saved a 12-week-old baby who stopped breathing at home, according to the . According to the report, when the baby's mother, Susanna Rohm, rushed outside with her infant to yell for help, two boys 鈥 nine-year-old Rocky Hurt and 10-year-old Ethan Wilson 鈥撀爏tepped in, using CPR skills they had learned from reading a CPR poster on the wall of their elementary school.