Calgary officer helps save choking child after pulling over speeding vehicle
The Calgary Police Service is sharing heartwarming photos of an officer reunited with the young child he saved over the weekend.
Police say Const. Adrian Chong pulled over a speeding vehicle on eastbound Stoney Trail on Saturday evening, but when he approached the vehicle, he found a distraught family inside with an unresponsive 17-month-old girl in the back seat.
It turns out the child's father was rushing to the hospital to get help.
The girl was conscious but clearly in medical distress, police said.
It was Chong who correctly determined the child was choking after confirming with her parents that she had recently been eating.
He rushed into action, and was able to dislodge the food by performing several back blows.
Though Chong had helped Camila, she still required medical attention, so the officer gave the family a police escort to the nearby South Health Campus hospital.
Police say the girl was cared for and later transferred to the Alberta Children’s Hospital for further treatment. She was released from the hospital a few days later.
On Thursday, Calgary police posted to social media about the harrowing incident, showing photos of the family being reunited with Chong after inviting him to their home.
CPS Const. Chong is reunited with Verga and Camila. (CPS) Police say Chong gave Camila a teddy bear as a present, and her parents Verga and Nacbar expressed their gratitude for his help.
"The family presented Const. Chong with a box of chocolates as a thank you, noting their experience with our officers was remarkable and they will forever remember Const. Chong for his role in saving Camila’s life," reads the post from Calgary police.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Despite union protest, new hybrid work rules for federal employees kick in Monday
Public service unions will start the week with an early-morning rally opposing the policy. But despite the unions' 'summer of discontent' and an ongoing court challenge, the new rules will still kick in on Sept. 9.
Here's what jobs will survive in the AI boom: Statistics Canada estimates
A recent study by Statistics Canada sheds light on how different occupations may be affected by the AI boom, including those who might lose their jobs in a more automation-driven future.
'Extremely vigorous' wildfire activity in central B.C. prompts crews to back off for safety
The wildfire fight in central B.C. intensified Friday, according to officials.
The 33 most anticipated movies of the fall
Here are some of the most anticipated films of this fall, from large to small and everything in between.
21 children are now known to have died in Kenya school fire
The number of children who were burned to death in a school dormitory in central Kenya has risen to 21, the government spokesperson said Saturday.
Paul Anka says long-in-the-works Broadway musical is still on the horizon
After well over a decade of planning to adapt his life story into a stage musical, the 83-year-old Ottawa-born musician says the concept is finally getting traction.
N.S. RCMP apologizes to Black community for wide-ranging effects of street checks
The commander of the RCMP in Nova Scotia says the force is sorry for the wide-ranging harms the province's Black community suffered due to the Mounties' historic use of street checks.
Quebec to authorize advance requests for medical assistance in dying as of Oct. 30
Quebec will authorize advance requests for medical assistance in dying (MAID) without waiting for Ottawa to amend its Criminal Code.