Kids & Family

Project Breathe Helps Ambulance Service Save Animals from Fire

A donation from Invisible Fence to Canonsburg General Hospital will equip first responders with masks to help pets suffering from smoke inhalation.

First responders of Canonsburg General Hospital Ambulance Service will become some of the best-equipped in the nation to save a pet’s life.

That’s because Invisible Fence of Western Pennsylvania is donating a pet oxygen mask kit to the ambulance service.

The donation is just a small part of Invisible Fence Brand’s Project Breathe, which was established with the goal of equipping every fire station in America and Canada with pet oxygen masks. These masks allow firefighters to give oxygen to pets who are suffering from smoke inhalation when they are rescued from fires. The masks often save pets’ lives.

Invisible Fence Brand has donated a total of more than 10,000 pet oxygen masks to fire stations all over the U.S. and Canada throughout the life of the program. A reported 90 plus pets have been saved by the donated masks so far, including a cat saved on Jan. 1 in Tecumseh, Ontario.

“When a family suffers the tragedy of a fire, lives are turned upside down,” said Albert Lee, director of Invisible Fence Brand. “Pets are valued family members, so we want families to know that their pet can be cared for if tragedy strikes.”

He added: “We realize that humans are the first-priority, but in many cases, pets can be saved if firefighters have the right equipment. Project Breathe is simply a way of giving firefighters the tools necessary to save pets’ lives.”

Canonsburg is now joining the ranks of cities like Chicago, Cleveland and Memphis, who have all received donated pet oxygen masks from Project Breathe.

 "Thank God they had the masks. They (the dogs) are just like family. I don’t know what I’d do without them. Things can be replaced. Lives can’t, whether they’re animals or people," said a pet owner whose dogs were recently rescued using donated masks.

Although the number of pets that die in fires in not an official statistic kept by the U.S. Fire Administration, industry web sites and sources have cited an estimated 40,000 to 150,000 pets die in fires each year—most succumbing to smoke inhalation.

In most states, emergency responders are unequipped to deal with the crisis. The loss is terrible for the family, heart wrenching for firefighters.

“These masks truly are blessings for Canonsburg,” said William R. Blair, EMT manager. “We’ve seen residents run back into burning homes to save a pet. It’s understandable, but extremely dangerous. These masks will give residents comfort in knowing that we can save their pets if they are suffering from smoke inhalation.”

Both the Lawrence Volunteer Fire Department and Muse Volunteer Fire Department have received similar kits from the company.

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