There are no specialty centers near Bakken fields.
Flames seared the pants off Kyle’s legs as he raced across a bed of ruddy red rocks, screaming for help.
A pipe on a machine processing oil at high heat had burst, soaking him in methanol and sparking a fire.
“You could just feel it cooking my legs,” he said. “It almost sounded like chicken frying in an oiler.”
Hours later, Kyle woke up at Regions Hospital in St. Paul last month,
after a 600-mile plane ride from the oil fields of North Dakota. His
legs were burned so deeply that the bottom layer of skin would never
grow back. It was the worst pain he’d ever felt.
Burn injuries among North Dakota workers have surged to more than
3,100 over the past five years, as the once nearly barren prairies have
become the epicenter of a massive oil-drilling boom. Despite the
flammability of Bakken crude and the danger of oil-rig work, North
Dakota has no burn centers. The Twin Cities is the closest place to go
for patients like Kyle, 27, who agreed to be interviewed on the
condition that his last name not be used. MORE
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