Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

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_I have a question
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Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

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Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

TULSA, Okla. – An Arkansas woman has died in Oklahoma while helping lead teenagers in a re-enactment of the westward journey of Mormons to Utah.

A spokeswoman for the Rogers, Arkansas, Stake of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints says 29-year-old Meaghan Lee Querry Blair of Rogers died Monday of what appeared to be heat stroke.

Deborah Neria told reporters that Blair became ill Monday near the end of a 7-mile hike near Tulsa. She was taken to a Tulsa hospital where she died. A phone call to the Rogers office rang unanswered Wednesday.

Blair and her husband were serving as leaders for teenagers on the trek. The groups typically wear pioneer-era clothing, pull handcarts and discuss the mid-1800s Mormons who walked across the Great Plains to Utah.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/06/22/ar ... -trek.html
“When we are confronted with evidence that challenges our deeply held beliefs we are more likely to reframe the evidence than we are to alter our beliefs. We simply invent new reasons, new justifications, new explanations. Sometimes we ignore the evidence altogether.” (Mathew Syed 'Black Box Thinking')
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Re: Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

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TULSA, Oklahoma — Monday's death of a 29-year-old mother of two provided a tragic tale of caution to the early part of trek season, when thousands of LDS teens around the world re-enact the Mormon pioneer exodus west.

Meaghan Lee Querry Blair of Rogers, Arkansas, suffered heat stroke symptoms near the end of a seven-mile hike through 95-degree heat Monday, the first day of the trek. She received immediate care and was transported by helicopter to a hospital in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where she died.

"We express our love and deepest sympathies to the family of Meaghan Blair," said Deborah Neria, spokeswoman for the Rogers Arkansas Stake of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. "This is a heartbreaking loss for the family and all who knew her. Meaghan leaves behind a husband, Michael, and two young children."

Blair and her husband Michael were serving as a "ma" and "pa" for a "family" of teens on the trek. Trek groups typically wear pioneer-era clothing, pull handcarts and discuss the sacrifices made by mid-1800s handcart pioneers who walked across the American plains to Utah.

Stake leaders, including Blair's father, took precautions against the heat at church-owned property near Pawhuska, Oklahoma, a local spokeswoman said.

The stake president, Greg Chandler, and one of his counselors, Brad Querry, who is Blair's father, nicknamed themselves "Headache" and "Nausea" to remind the group of the symptoms of dehydration, according to a pre-trek Facebook post by Chandler's wife, Valerie.

They monitored weather forecasts and altered the trek's schedule so Monday's hike started earlier, encountered additional shade and included swimming, Neria said.

The trek also included a doctor and two registered nurses.

Blair is an organ donor, and doctors worked Monday night and Tuesday to harvest her organs to help others.

Family, friends and church members expressed shock, heartbreak and sadness at the news of Blair's death.

Chandler posted a statement from Blair's father on Facebook.

"It is with heavy heart and sorrow that we share the passing of Meaghan Lee Blair," Querry said in the statement. "Meg was the wife of her beloved husband Mike Blair, mother to Evelyn and Asher and (my) and Maureen's oldest daughter. We appreciate all of the expressions of sympathy and prayers. She lived an epic life of cheerful devotion to Mike and the kids. She was generous to a fault in life as she has been in death. While we are at this time unclear as to the next steps, we will communicate as we understand better. Thank you for your support and kindness over these last few hours."

LDS Church headquarters in Salt Lake City publishes a manual of trek guidelines that includes a mandate of 10 gallons of water for each handcart. A church website, safety.lds.org, outlines safe trek activities and includes training, preparation and safety videos.

Some LDS stakes in the Southern United States beat the heat by moving treks to Christmas vacation.

The role of the ma and pa on a trek is to lead "family" discussions and enhance the spiritual experience for the youths, build unity, encourage positive participation and maintain hydration and safety.

"Significant preparations were made," Neria said, "including having medical staff on hand. The whole thing is heartbreaking."

A family friend set up a crowdfunding web page to collect donations to help the family. The youcaring.com page for Michael and Meaghan Blair collected more than $6,000 of the $8,000 target in less than 24 hours.

Mormons in the Arkansas area turned to their faith as they worked to support the Blairs.

"Local church members have been in close contact with the family to offer their love and support," Neria said. "We pray that they will be blessed with God's peace and understanding as they deal with this terrible loss."

The president of a neighboring Bentonville Arkansas Stake, Simon Keogh, sent a message to area church members asking for prayers for the Blair family.

"I am asking that we unite our faith and prayers on behalf of the Blair family, the Querry family, President Chandler and all who have been affected by this tragedy," Keogh wrote, "that we will collectively ask the Lord to pour out comfort, healing and testimony-building faith upon our brothers and sisters in the Rogers Stake, that the power of Heaven will be made manifest to all."

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/8656 ... tml?pg=all

If faith and prayers work, why is she dead?

Taking teenagers on a 7 mile trek in 95 degree heat is plain stupidity and child endangerment.
“When we are confronted with evidence that challenges our deeply held beliefs we are more likely to reframe the evidence than we are to alter our beliefs. We simply invent new reasons, new justifications, new explanations. Sometimes we ignore the evidence altogether.” (Mathew Syed 'Black Box Thinking')
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Re: Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

Post by _Chap »

I have a question wrote:Taking teenagers on a 7 mile trek in 95 degree heat is plain stupidity and child endangerment.


Really? They did that?

I am astonished at this idiocy.

What does the CoJCoLDS have priesthood leadership for if not to stop crazy people acting so irresponsibly? I'm sorry that an adult died, but it could have been a kid - whose parents presumably let them go on this trip, Lord help us!
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Re: Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

Post by _Mormonicious »

Dying for Mormon Man god and his Bastard son, Mormon jesus to prove that Bring'em Young was right to flee the United States to become part of the United States.

Stupid damned Mormons
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Re: Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

Post by _consiglieri »

Stakes have spokeswomen?
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Re: Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

Post by _Maksutov »

Very unfortunate. My sympathies are with her family.
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Re: Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

Post by _Jesse Pinkman »

Whoever came up with doing these treks is a damned idiot. These damned treks have replaced Youth Conference for our Stake every other year. I refused to let my kids go. There is too much of a chance of heat stroke, dehydration, etc. Now a young woman has died. How sad.
So you're chasing around a fly and in your world, I'm the idiot?

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Re: Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

Post by _Lemmie »

From lds.orgs, in the trek guidelines:
Only authorized medical personnel should call for emergency medical services, as requested by stake or ward leaders
https://www.lds.org/youth/activities/bc ... f?lang=eng


That bugs me. So let's say my kid goes on a trek (god forbid) and I send a phone with them, but according to this, they are forbidden to call 911 on their own? Not happening.
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Re: Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

Post by _I have a question »

Lemmie wrote:From lds.orgs, in the trek guidelines:
Only authorized medical personnel should call for emergency medical services, as requested by stake or ward leaders
https://www.lds.org/youth/activities/bc ... f?lang=eng


That bugs me. So let's say my kid goes on a trek (god forbid) and I send a phone with them, but according to this, they are forbidden to call 911 on their own? Not happening.


From the guidelines:
What preventative measures can we take to ensure that our trek is carried out safely?

How about not conducting it when temperatures are life threatening?
“When we are confronted with evidence that challenges our deeply held beliefs we are more likely to reframe the evidence than we are to alter our beliefs. We simply invent new reasons, new justifications, new explanations. Sometimes we ignore the evidence altogether.” (Mathew Syed 'Black Box Thinking')
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Re: Arkansas woman dies in Oklahoma recreating Mormon trek

Post by _I have a question »

From the article in the DN
Keogh wrote, "that we will collectively ask the Lord to pour out comfort, healing and testimony-building faith upon our brothers and sisters in the Rogers Stake, that the power of Heaven will be made manifest to all."


So someone dying through negligent planning is a testimony building opportunity....

Staggering.

Unfortunately the Church will have ensured that culpability rests at a local level, and on local leaders. The Church will take no responsibility for this tragedy occurring because of inadequate training and instruction of the people they appoint to have responsibility for people participating in Church programmes. And for not having a robust and effective risk management process. When you read the guidelines and consider the inadequate process for getting volunteer leaders, a tragedy such as this was a matter of when, not if.

The Church should have immediately put a block on any further treks taking place anywgere until a proper investigation has happened and the safety protocols (trek guidelines) thoroughly reviewed in light of this investigation. If it hasn't done that already it is gross incompetence at a very senior level.
“When we are confronted with evidence that challenges our deeply held beliefs we are more likely to reframe the evidence than we are to alter our beliefs. We simply invent new reasons, new justifications, new explanations. Sometimes we ignore the evidence altogether.” (Mathew Syed 'Black Box Thinking')
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