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Med student dies while trapped in cave.

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  • Med student dies while trapped in cave.

    Do we have any one @ UVA med school?
    This is just awful on so many levels.



    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_cave_rescue_death/print


    By MIKE STARK, Associated Press Writer Mike Stark, Associated Press Writer – 1 hr 22 mins ago

    Body of trapped Utah spelunker won't be recovered

    SPANISH FORK, Utah – The popular Utah cave where a 26-year-old medical student died earlier in the week will be closed permanently and his body will not be removed, state and county officials said Friday.


    Any effort to recover John Jones' body from the cramped underground chute where he became stuck with his head at an angle below his feet Tuesday night would simply be too dangerous, they said.
    "If we put other people in that same location, they could get stuck or get hurt," said Lt. John Valentine with Utah County search and rescue.
    Jones, of Stansbury Park, died just before midnight Wednesday — about 28 hours after getting wedged into a tight, unmapped passage of Nutty Putty Cave. Workers had tried feverishly to free him from the underground chute about 100 feet below the surface and about 400 feet from the cave's entrance.
    Jones was trapped headfirst in a vertical shaft about 18 inches wide and 10 inches high. The 1,500-foot Nutty Putty cave is south of Salt Lake City.
    Utah County Sheriff Jim Tracy said Jones' exact cause of death will probably never be known but contributing factors likely included his inverted position for a prolonged period of time and the cave's cold temperatures.
    Those who met Friday morning — state officials from the agency that owns the land, the cave's operators, Jones' family and law enforcement officials — said they decided unanimously to close the cave as quickly as possible.
    "We've suffered a tragedy in this cave that we hope to prevent from happening again," said Sgt. Tom Hodgson, coordinator for Utah County's search and rescue operations.
    A "Herculean effort" to free him was limited by the cramped space, leaving one rescuer chipping away rock with a ball-peen hammer just six inches to swing, said Sgt. Tom Hodgson, coordinator for Utah County's search and rescue operations.
    "We feel like it would be John's will to protect the safety of future cavers," his younger brother, Josh, said at a news conference Friday.
    For the past two years, the St. George native was attending medical school at the University of Virginia, hoping to pursue a career as a pediatric cardiologist. Jones, his wife Emily and their 13-month-old daughter had come home to Utah for the Thanksgiving holiday and to share the news that another baby is expected in June.
    Family said they knew Jones fought to survive throughout the rescue effort and was commended by rescue crews for "his remarkable good spirits and resilience to the end."
    Although Jones' death is the first known fatality since cavers began exploring Nutty Putty's narrow passageways in the 1960s, rescuers have been called to the cave five times in the last 10 years.
    The last time was in 2004 when a teenage boy had to be pulled out of an area not far from where Jones got stuck.
    The cave hosted 5,000 to 10,000 visitors per year until 2006, when it was temporarily closed while managers implemented a stricter system of access that included a permit system, requirement that cavers be with someone experienced and a locked gate. It reopened in May and had once again become popular, especially among amateur cavers, said Mike Leavitt, who managed access to the cave.
    Although the cave was popular, it had never been fully mapped. Jones found himself in one of the areas off the cave's main passage during an outing with 11 friends and family Tuesday night and was unable to get out.
    "This particular area is very, very difficult ... where the cave peters out to virtually nothing," said Valentine, who said he'd been in Nutty Putty some 25 times over the years.
    The rescue took its toll on crews working at the cave, many of whom were grieving and struggling with their inability to free Jones.
    "It's a very difficult experience to just be that close and still not be able to pull it off," Valentine said.
    A uniformed deputy will remain at the cave's entrance until it can be properly sealed, the sheriff said. The family will also be allowed to place a memorial marker at the site. Funeral services for Jones are planned for Saturday.
    Josh Jones said the family is considering a fund to help educate young people on cave safety.

  • #2
    That is sooooo sad. I had a classmate from high school who died in an underwater cave with her husband, they got disoriented and ran out of air. They had a one-year old daughter.
    Luanne
    wife, mother, nurse practitioner

    "You have not converted a man because you have silenced him." (John, Viscount Morely, On Compromise, 1874)

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    • #3
      We saw the news yesterday--it's even more horrifying that they have to leave his body down there. His poor wife--she looks like she's my age, with a baby and another one on the way to boot. How horrible.
      Married to a newly minted Pediatric Rad, momma to a sweet girl and a bunch of (mostly) cute boy monsters.



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      • #4
        How very tragic - I can't imagine how his wife must feel.

        Then I start thinking how very irresponsible of him to get himself into that type of situation knowing that he has children.
        Kris

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        • #5
          Originally posted by HouseofWool View Post
          Then I start thinking how very irresponsible of him to get himself into that type of situation knowing that he has children.
          Sadly, that was one of my first reactions, too
          Jen
          Wife of a PGY-4 orthopod, momma to 2 DDs, caretaker of a retired race-dog, Hawkeye!


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          • #6
            I read that caving is not supposed to be dangerous and that that cave has been visited by about 10,000 people. However, I also read that two others were previously rescued from that part of the cave. It should have been sealed off years ago.
            Wife and #1 Fan of Attending Adult & Geriatric Psychiatrist.

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            • #7
              Very, very sad. Makes me want to go give DH a hug right now and appreciate people while they're still here.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by OrionGrad View Post
                Very, very sad. Makes me want to go give DH a hug right now and appreciate people while they're still here.
                It makes me want to go smack mine upside the head. He loves to do stupid crap like this and has no sense of his own morality. Grrrr.

                Terrible loss for the family. Just awful

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by HouseofWool View Post
                  How very tragic - I can't imagine how his wife must feel.

                  Then I start thinking how very irresponsible of him to get himself into that type of situation knowing that he has children.
                  Also one of my first thoughts! Several other people had died in this cave, in the same area and the owners had been warned three years ago to increase safety there. Obviously they didn't.

                  Makes you wonder if people research such things before they do it.
                  Student and Mom to an Oct 2013 boy
                  Wife to Anesthesia Critical Care attending

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by MrsC View Post
                    Makes you wonder if people research such things before they do it.
                    I'd guess probably not. I think people generally believe that if it's open to the public, it's safe. DH and I went to a cave with some friends in college, and it never occurred to me to look it up before we went. It was in a national park, and there were lots of other people there at the time.

                    A few years later, my BIL went there with friends, and while they were there, a kid fell off the path and got stuck on a ledge. They were able to get the kid (and their pictures in the paper), but it's so scary to think that we were in the exact same place and didn't have any idea that it might be dangerous. Lesson learned, but if you're new to exploring caves, you might not know to do that kind of research if it seems like a public, safe cave.
                    Laurie
                    My team: DH (anesthesiologist), DS (9), DD (8)

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