Boston EMS dispatcher helps deliver a baby

E-mail this article

Invalid email address
Invalid email address

Sending your article

Your article has been sent.

01/10/2013 6:40 PM
  • E-mail
  • E-mail this article

    Invalid E-mail address
    Invalid E-mail address

    Sending your article

    Your article has been sent.

Michelle Chu, a Boston EMS dispatcher, was in the middle of training today on how to handle high-stress situations when she found herself in the middle of one, coaching a Hyde Park man over the phone as he delivered his wife’s baby.

Chu talked the new father through the delicate process of delivery while her training instructor, EMT Mike Mynahan, listened over her shoulder, Boston Emergency Medical Services said in a statement.

“There’s always that first surge of adrenaline,” said Chu, an EMT who has delivered babies before while working in the field. “But once you start to realize you have a task to accomplish, this sort of calm comes over you.”

Explaining to someone else how to deliver a baby, especially someone with no medical experience, can be much harder than delivering a baby yourself, she said in a telephone interview.

When she was originally training to be an EMT, Chu’s instructors told her she was being too nice at times and needed to take control. Today she heeded that advice, she said. With an understandably agitated father on the phone, Chu knew she had to take control — and calm him down.

“Your most important job as someone who is on the phone for 911 is to be the voice of reason,” Chu said. “You have to be reassuring but authoritative.”

After the father successfully delivered the baby, Chu congratulated the mother and stayed on the phone with the couple until an ambulance arrrived.

The best moment, she said, was when she finally heard the baby crying in the background.

Todd Feathers can be reached at todd.feathers@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter at @ToddFeathers.
  • E-mail
  • E-mail this article

    Invalid E-mail address
    Invalid E-mail address

    Sending your article

    Your article has been sent.

On the beat

Columnist Adrian Walker says UMass Dartmouth is shaken after revelations that one of the Marathon bomb suspects was a student there. Read more
Adrian Walker
loading video... (please wait a moment)

Editor's Choice

'You will run again,' Obama tells shaken Boston

'You will run again,' Obama tells shaken Boston

President Obama delivered an uplifting speech to a city shaken by Boston Marathon bombings.
For Boston, a time to heal, a time to play hockey

For Boston, a time to heal, a time to play hockey

There is no easy, quick cure for a city’s fractured soul. There are only first steps -- and one of them came at Bruins game.
MORE
archives

LOCAL BLOGS

BOSTON AREA

Universal Hub

A collection of writing from hundreds of Boston-area bloggers.

The Chinatown Blog

Stories and events related to Boston's Chinatown and the Asian American community in Massachusetts

CommonWealth Magazine

Politics, ideas, and civic life in Massachusetts

Red Mass Group

News and commentary about Massachusetts and beyond

Blue Mass Group

Politics in Massachusetts and around the nation

Boston 1775

History, analysis, and unabashed gossip about the start of the American Revolution.
COLLEGE NEWSPAPER SITES

The 1851 Chronicle

The official student-run newspaper of Lasell College

The Berkeley Beacon

The weekly student newspaper at Emerson College

The Daily Collegian

The student newspaper of UMass-Amherst.

The Daily Free Press

The independent student newspaper at Boston University

The Harvard Crimson

The nation's oldest continuously published daily college newspaper.

The Heights

The independent student newspaper of Boston College

The Huntington News

The independent student newspaper of Northeastern University

The Suffolk Journal

Suffolk University's student-run newspaper

The Tech

MIT's oldest and largest newspaper

The Tufts Daily

The independent student newspaper of Tufts University