Two injured in beach accidents
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Andrew Edwards
Two beachgoers suffered spinal cord injuries in swimming accidents at
Laguna beaches over the weekend, one of whom lifeguards initially
feared might be paralyzed.
Marine Safety Chief Mark Klosterman said lifeguards did not know
how Koichi Mori, a 23-year-old Japanese exchange student-athlete, was
hurt. An unknown man pulled Mori from the water just south of Hotel
Laguna at about 10 a.m. Saturday.
The rescuer left the beach before lifeguards could interview him
to find out what happened.
“We do not know the mechanism behind the injury,” Klosterman said.
Once Mori was in the hands of lifeguards, they learned he had very
little feeling below his neck and thought he may have been paralyzed
by the accident. He was airlifted to Mission Hospital, but as early
as Monday recovery looked more likely.
“He, it appears, has regained more feeling and strength,”
Klosterman said.
On Wednesday, his condition at Mission Hospital was listed as
serious.
Mori is a student and pole-vaulter at the Pacific Rim Language
Center in Rowland Heights in the San Gabriel Valley. The school’s
director, Kurt Swain, said the entire school was affected by the
accident.
“We hope for the best,” Swain said. “But if you had been on our
small campus Monday, everyone was in shock.”
Mori finished third in an elite pole vault competition at the 2004
Steve Scott Invitational track meet on May 2 at UC Irvine. He took
fourth at the Claremont Classic on May 11 and also competed in the
April Mt. SAC Relays in Walnut.
“We’re pulling for him,” Swain said. “It’s a tragedy for a young
guy, a young athlete.”
On July 16, an 18-year-old woman from Missouri was taken to
Mission Hospital via helicopter with a spinal cord injury that
officials said appeared to be less severe than Mori’s. At about 4:30
p.m., a wave knocked her down, causing her to hit her head on the
ocean floor. Lifeguards did not release the woman’s name, but
Klosterman said he believed her prognosis was hopeful.
“I understand [she] has regained most of her feeling and
movement,” he said.
Last year, 32 spinal cord injuries were reported at Laguna
beaches, but most weren’t serious. About 95% to 98% of the cases end
with patients being released from the hospital suffering only from
cervical strain, Klosterman said.
When beachgoers injure their spinal cords, the injuries usually
don’t result from diving into shallow water, Klosterman said. The
most frequent culprits are powerful waves -- the surf can throw
novice bodyboarders or bodysurfers to the bottom or blindside
beachgoers as they wade in the ocean.
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