UPDATE: Rescue in the Phoenix Chopper Mountains launches into a spinning race



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(UPDATED June 6, 2019: The husband's victim explains to a local radio show how his wife's face was left black and blue by the stretcher that turns and is too weak to get up from bed since the incident. See below for more details.)

The day's hike of an elderly woman in one of Phoenix's prized urban mountains literally escaped control Tuesday, while she needed a helicopter rescue.

Social media remained on during and after the morning rescue as people shared on television a video showing the nauseating and nauseous ride of the woman on a stretcher suspended by a rope below the rescue helicopter while he was flying over Piestewa Peak.

The rotation was clearly a problem, starting with the washing of the rotor of the rescue helicopter that spun the stretcher. The woman seemed to be spinning at about 150 rpm at one point.

A Phoenix Fire Department official held a press conference Tuesday afternoon to help the public understand what happened. For the experts, the stretcher was "very rare", but it did not matter.

Paul Apolinar, chief police officer of Phoenix, said that out of 210 rescues led by the department with stretchers under helicopters over the past six years, rotating events have occurred twice.

The ministry received a call for a woman who was to be rescued Tuesday at Piestewa around 8:15 am

The 74-year-old woman slipped and hit the ground as she hurt her face on the mountain top trail, injured her head and face, said Phoenix fire captain Bobby Dubnow. She started to be disoriented and could not walk.

The rescuers decided to make a long rescue with a helicopter, given its position on the mountain. After being in the Stokes basket, a line would normally have been set to stop any rotation. But fire officials said the waiting line was not turning so that a hoist was trying to get him into the helicopter. The rotation soon reached the proportions of Six Flags-Wrong, or worse, as shown in the video.

However, the victim "has not suffered any adverse effects from this rotation," Dubnow said. "She had dizziness and nausea," he added.

She was treated for her walking injuries at a local hospital.

UPDATE: The victim's husband, George Metro, on Thursday spoke to Mac and Gaydos about KTAR radio (92.3 FM), describing his wife's wounds as more serious than those initially reported.

Metro said he and his wife, experienced hikers, came down from the top and were on flat ground when the 74-year-old woman "crushed her foot" and fell forward. She broke her nose, cut her face and injured her left hand and right leg. Metro interrupted the bleeding and called for help, who sent the helicopter.

"I did not know what to think," said Metro, after watching the rescue basket start running wild after his momentum. "It was very scary and I think I was shocked."

Metro walked to his car before going to the John C. Lincoln Hospital and was surprised to see that his wife was not in the best shape that he had seen for the last time.

"I just could not believe it," he told radio hosts. "His eyes were all blackened, his face was all black and blue, his hands and feet were black and blue, and I said Jesus, what happened?"

A nurse explained to him that "the blood ran to his head and broke the small vessels on his face," he said.

His wife told him that "she thought she was going to die" while the cart was spinning. "She took deep inspirations … inspired and expired, she did not know when it would all end."

Metro thanked the medical staff of the hospital. His wife is "always so weak that she could not get up from bed." We hope this changes, her face is still swollen. "

The couple will celebrate its 50th wedding anniversary next October, he said.

Click here for the recorded interview of the station.

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