How a devastating accident led to the N.W.T's new air ambulance service
Katherine Barton | CBC News | Posted: April 27, 2016 11:01 PM | Last Updated: April 28, 2016
Mike Zorn was seriously injured in a snowmobile accident near Namushka Lodge in March 2015
Dan Hunter and his hockey teammates were out for their annual snowmobile trip last March at Namushka Lodge, when an accident left his team captain severely injured and far from a community or highway.
After a day of ice fishing, Hunter and his friends were heading back to the N.W.T. fishing lodge on their sleds, when their team captain, Mike Zorn, hit a series of snow drifts.
"His Ski-Doo was facing straight into the snow about 100 yards from him," says Hunter, who was first on the scene.
Hunter says Zorn was buried in the snow. After digging him out, Zorn's friends did some basic first aid, asking him to move his fingers and toes, and made sure he knew who he was.
"Right then and there we knew that something was seriously, seriously wrong. He's a very big man and he was in some serious pain.
"It was pretty devastating," Hunter says. "He just could not move, he couldn't breathe. He was having trouble breathing."
1 hour 14 minute call
The group knew Zorn needed to be medevaced out of there.
Hunter set off for the lodge, where he called the N.W.T.'s ambulance service and told them what happened.
"I had to have been transferred at least six to eight times to different various departments, within the government, whether it was Stanton hospital, emergency, or the nurse practitioner, or back to the ambulance or the RCMP," he says. "I had to tell my story over and over again.
"I did look on the phone records and it took an hour and 14 minutes before I finally got confirmation that something was going to happen."
Great Slave Helicopters in Yellowknife was on standby with a chopper, but Zorn needed medical attention.
"The RCMP stepped up for us," Hunter says.
Though the RCMP aren't responsible for medical extractions, it called one of its medically trained constables who was home with his family.
"He came and ultimately, I believe, saved my friend's life," Hunter says.
Still recovering
Zorn was seriously injured.
"He had 14 breaks all on one side, on his ribs, which led to a flailed chest and a collapsed lung. He had a ripped diaphragm. He had fluids in his body cavity and in his lung," Hunter says.
Zorn was immediately medevaced to an Edmonton hospital, where he stayed for more than three weeks.
"And even to this day ... he still has not returned to work," Hunter says.
"He's still at home trying to recover. It's been a long, long process."
'This is huge for the North'
This week, the N.W.T. announced a new emergency response service for medical extractions when a person is injured in remote regions of the territory — something Hunter helped push for.
"Our whole hockey team talked about it and we just really didn't want anyone to go through this again. It was devastating for a lot of people," he says.
"We're best friends, hockey teams are very close, and for Mike's family as well, we just wanted something in place where minutes, or even hours in our case, weren't wasted."
Hunter was told on the day of Zorn's accident that had it taken just seven more minutes to get the helicopter deployed, it would have been cancelled due to loss of sunlight — that makes him think of the time wasted on the phone, finding help.
"We were that close to losing my friend. I know if he was not picked up that day he would not have made it."
Hunter sent emails to local MLAs, and eventually met with Al Martin, president of ACCESS Air Ambulance and Air Tindi, whose aircraft will be involved in the new service.
"We both felt very strongly about the same thing, that something needed to get in place," Hunter says.
Now that it is, he says it's huge news.
"I'm very excited. This is great news for the North."