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Cape Fear Valley is a 765-bed regional health system serving a six-county region of Southeastern North Carolina, with more than 935,000 patients annually. A private not-for-profit organization and the state’s 9th largest health system, it includes Cape Fear Valley Medical Center, Highsmith-Rainey Specialty Hospital, Cape Fear Valley Rehabilitation Center and Bladen County Hospital.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012


Cape Fear Valley EMS World Champs Again


FAYETTEVILLE – For the second time in three years, a Cape Fear Valley Health EMS team has won the most prestigious EMS competition in the nation.

The 9th Annual Journal of Emergency Services (JEMS) Games was held last week in Baltimore, M.D., pitting the best EMS teams against one another in graded competition. The games are open to any team in the world. This year’s participants included powerhouse squads from Miami-Dade, Las Vegas and FDNY.

Cumberland County EMS paramedics Lee Westbrook, Larry Smith, Brian Pearce and Joseph Crowder, all EMT-Ps, represented Cape Fear Valley Health in winning the two-day competition. Westbrook is a Lead Paramedic. Smith is a Fleet Maintenance Supervisor. Pearce is Director of Cumberland County EMS. And Crowder, the team’s newest member, is a Training Officer and Assistant Chief over EMS system development.

Pearce, Smith and Westbrook have known, worked and competed in EMS competitions together for more than a decade. They reside in the Eastover community a few miles apart and have volunteered with the Eastover Fire Department, where they respond to fire and medical emergencies.

All the competing teams were tested for clinical skills during day one, including a hazardous materials accident simulation and a heart attack response. The three teams with the best overall scores advanced to the final round and were graded on mock disaster drill performance before an audience of their peers.

Cape Fear Valley’s final scenario was a tornado involving seven patients and just 20 minutes to treat each victim. The simulation was eerily reminiscent for Westbrook and Pearce, who both responded to tornadoes that ravaged western Cumberland County last April.

Cumberland County EMS will receive approximately $20,000 in EMS prizes for the victory, including a $10,000 video airway device, a training mannequin and carbon monoxide detector. 

Cape Fear Valley’s EMS team first won the JEMS competition in 2010, beating 16 other teams. That year’s squad included Dave Cuddeback, a Duplin County EMS training officer, who served as a technical advisor to Westbrook, Smith and Pearce. 

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