Freeway baby to celebrate first birthday with firefighters
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Angelique Flores
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- Two Fountain Valley paramedics who delivered a boy on
the San Diego Freeway a year ago will help celebrate the child’s first
birthday.
The Fountain Valley Fire Department will allow Bill and Darcy Debernarde
to celebrate their son Bryce’s birthday Saturday afternoon at the fire
station. Although hosting a birthday party is rare, the department made
an exception this time, said Capt. Joe Cucinotti of the Fountain Valley
Fire Department.
Last Jan. 6, the expectant Debernardes set out from their Long Beach home
for Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach.
“We made it to the Warner [Avenue] exit on the San Diego Freeway when I
asked my husband to pull over and call 911,” Darcy Debernardes said.
At about 12:45 a.m, her husband parked the car near the Warner exit and
called for help on his cellular phone. Two California Highway Patrol
officers arrived to find Darcy Debernardes with her feet up on the dash
board. Minutes later, two paramedics from the Fountain Valley Fire
Department arrived.
“When we stopped on the scene, the baby’s head was half delivered,” said
Bill Walker, a firefighter and paramedic with the department.
After seeing the umbilical cord wrapped around the baby’s head, Walker
called for assistance from his partner, Bryan McKay, who unwrapped it.
“The baby was brought into the world on the [San Diego] Freeway,” McKay
said.
Without the help of these men, the Debernardes believe their baby may not
have survived. After the safe delivery, the Debernardes were transported
to Orange Coast Memorial Hospital, where baby Bryce Warner -- whose
middle name was suggested by McKay and Walker -- was found to be in good
health.
“This was most unique,” Walker said.
It was Walker’s and McKay’s only baby delivery -- in a car, on the
freeway and with the cord wrapped around the baby’s neck.
“This is something I’ll always remember,” McKay said.
McKay and Walker, who have not seen Bryce for a year, are looking forward
to seeing the boy. The Debernardes want to celebrate their son’s birthday
while giving thanks to the men who saved his life. They also want to
thank AirTouch representative Ande Karllson, who fixed the couple’s
cellular phone earlier that day.
“We’re grateful to them all,” Darcy Debernardes said.
Because the Debernardes used their cellular phone to call for help, they
were given a Wireless Samaritan Award by the Cellular Telecommunications
Industry Assn. The award honors people who have used their cellular
phones to prevent a crime or make a dramatic rescue.
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