CAMP FOSTER, Japan, Aug. 25, 2017 — Cries of a desperate mother and the sight of a child's limp body on the beach alarmed Marine Corps Capt. Justin Griffis, who was spending a normal day snorkeling with his family at Maeda Flats in Okinawa, Japan, July 23.
Griffis shoved through the mass of people who had gathered and was immediately drawn to the lifeless body of a 7-year old Japanese boy.
"My first thoughts were, 'They need help. How can I help?'" said Griffis, a current operations and training officer with Marine Air Control Group 18, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing. "There was a moment where I thought, 'Oh my God, what do I do?' but that thought went away the moment it arrived. That's when my training kicked in."
Griffis, like most Marines, took a CPR class and knew what had to be done. However, after his initial shock wore off, Griffis said, he noticed a woman already administering CPR to the boy.
Rachel Gruber, an emergency room nurse with U.S. Naval Hospital Okinawa here, was administering chest compressions in accordance with CPR procedures. Several other service members also were present, trying to assist the boy in any way they could.
Without hesitation, Griffis began to give mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to the boy.
"Every time I gave emergency breathing, I was getting water,
Safe Transport
The boy desperately needed to get to a hospital, so when Gruber and Griffis noticed a man holding a boogie board, they sprang into action as Griffis' wife, Jen, raced toward him.
Using the board as a makeshift stretcher, Griffis, Gruber and Marine Corps Sgt. Bradley Best transported the boy swiftly and carefully away from the beach. Best is a ground training noncommissioned officer in charge with Headquarters and Headquarters Squadron, Marine Corps Air Station Futenma.
With no response from the boy, Gruber yelled for someone to get an automated external defibrillator. Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt. Jonathan Fassnacht and his wife, Octa, immediately took off in search of one. Moments later, they ran into the surf medics, who were already on their way with the machine. The team struggled to dry the boy's wet body to attach the defibrillator and send an electric shock to his heart.
After several attempts at doing so, they loaded him onto the ambulance that had just arrived. The emergency medical technicians raced to the nearest hospital, leaving Griffis and the others in stunned silence. After EMTs picked up the boy, he was immediately taken to a nearby hospital, and later was transferred to a hospital in mainland Japan, where his family resides.
Realization
Griffis said he snapped back to reality when he caught sight of his family.
"My wife and two kids were trucking up the hill with all of the stuff we brought to the beach," he said. "It got real to me at that point; this could have easily been one of them if I kept my eyes off of them."
Griffis said the harrowing incident drove him to take action and inspired him. He got with Red Cross and his unit's family readiness officer to develop a CPR class not only for service