VIDEO: Fur-st Aid Kit: Firefighters Use Oxygen Mask To Save Cat’s Life

Amazing rescue of pet puss caught in house blaze. 

The rescued cat from the house fire, Fluffy using an oxygen mask on 24th February 2021 on the 1600 block of English Avenue in Indianapolis in the United States. Note: This picture is a screenshot from the video. (@indianapolisfiredepartment/Clipzilla)

An Indiana fireman managed to save one of the nine cats that are believed dead following a house fire that destroyed a building in the city of Indianapolis.

In the video footage that was retrieved, it can be seen how the fireman, from Indianapolis Fire Department, tackled the blaze while he was desperately trying to revive the cat using oxygen which certainly used up one of its nine children’s lives and surviving this place.

The cause of the fire is under investigation. “W/in 2 min. of arrival at 1606 English Ave. #IFD Firefighters rescue 71 y/o male from burning structure & establish CPR. #IEMS Transport to Eskenazi in critical condition. Unclear on what started the fire. 20 minutes to mark under control. Working alarms. No FF injuries. #IEMS crews tended to an unconscious kitty named Fluffy after #IFD FF’s rescued it. Utilizing the #ProjectBreathe mask & O2, the cat showed visible improvement before transport to #IACS for smoke inhalation. 3 cats perished 5 cats unaccounted for.” said Indianapolis Fire Department in their statement.

The cat, named Fluffy, was successfully revived after the use of the oxygen mask, but three other cats were confirmed to have lost their lives in the incident and five have not been found yet.

There have been assumptions that they merely fled from the scene out of panic and cannot be discovered among the debris.

The Fireman also rescued the elderly owner of the property who remains in critical condition at the hospital.

The Indianapolis Fire Department is the founding member of one of the 28 FEMA Urban Search and Rescue Task Force. Indiana Task Force 1 (IN-TF1) is made up of members of multiple fire departments in Marion County.

As per the reports of the National Fire Protection Association, there are up to 400,000 house fires every year in the United States.

In about 42 percent of all reported house fire incidents, the fire started in the kitchen, most often from unsupervised heated stoves.

Smoking, Christmas trees, heaters, and other electrical appliances are some of the other most common causes of house fires.

Moreover, approximately 18,000 house fires are caused by candles each year.

As per the report, residential is the leading property type for fire deaths (75.0%), fire injuries (77.1%), and fire dollar loss (43.3%). It has been also seen that in the US African American males (21.6) and American Indian males (17.2) have the highest fire death rates per million population.

Apart from people suffering major material loss, injuries, and even their lives, about 40,000 pets die in residential fires each year, most from smoke inhalation, and 500,000 pets are affected overall.

(Edited by Ritaban Misra and Vaibhav Vishwanath Pawar)