Archive for June, 2011

Bystanders & Paramedics Save Club Staff during Work

Posted by cocreator on June 16, 2011
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Russell Morrison barely remembers the day his heart stopped four times but he will always remember the technology and people involved in saving his life.


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The Invercargill Licensing Trust recently granted more than $4000 to buy its 57th defibrillator for the region – Mr Morrison’s life was saved by one of the first.

Russell Morrison the Survivor

In early 2008 the defibrillator was donated to the Georgetown Bowling Club. Three weeks later Mr Morrison, then 65 and working as the club’s greenkeeper, collapsed.

He was preparing the green for an upcoming tournament when he stopped breathing, he said yesterday.

“I was told that the mower took off, ending up in a ditch, and I landed on the green.”

Two first-year bowlers assisted. One started CPR while the other rushed for his cellphone to call an ambulance.

Another club member and trained defibrillator operator who happened to be driving past was flagged down and he began attempting to restart Mr Morrison’s heart.

“I’m told I leapt 75mm off the ground,” he said.

The ambulance quickly arrived, paramedics took over and he was resuscitated another three times.

He was taken to Southland Hospital and his daughter Pam Wilson and her two brothers were told the news was grim.

“I got a call to say Dad had collapsed and it wasn’t looking good. I was told there was no hope. I didn’t think he would survive,” Mrs Wilson said yesterday.

Mr Morrison was incoherent and does not remember the next few days.

“There was not much that could be done for me and virtually, I was in a room to die.”

But the defibrillator proved its worth and left doctors in awe of Mr Morrison’s recovery.

He was taken through to Dunedin for an angiogram and it was found a blood clot was the cause. He also had 90 per cent of three parts of his arteries blocked.

Mr Morrison said he appreciated everyone’s contribution and the defibrillator.

“When I look back I have enjoyed the past few years and look forward to many more. The defibrillator saved my life.”

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Cops Save Elderly Woman at Train Station

Posted by cocreator on June 13, 2011
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A 62-year-old woman is recovering in hospital after being found with no pulse outside Woolwich DLR station on Wednesday.

James Brown and Dan Piper the Saviours

Two police officers, PC James Brown and PCSO Dan Piper, were alerted to the woman, who had also stopped breathing, and began resuscitating her until London Ambulance staff took over.

Doctors and paramedics say the officers actions saved the woman’s life.

The woman is believed to have suffered a heart attack and is now recovering in hospital.

PC Brown, 37, a children’s entertainer before joining the Met 10 years ago, said: “In these situations the adrenaline just kicks in and you know that whatever you do next can make a huge difference to someone and their family. The training just kicks in.

“We were relieved when we felt a slight pulse after the CPR and we both knew we had done our best.”

He added: “This incident just makes the job worth it. If I retire in 20 years and I have done nothing else, I will always remember the day I tried my level best to give someone a chance to live.”

Former builder PCSO Piper said: “I cannot describe it how it feels when someone thanks you for saving them and when you feel you have made a difference for an entire family.”

The officers are both part of the Greenwich Transport Hub Team.

Greenwich’s borough commander Chief Superintendent Richard Wood said: “This is the Met at its finest. I am very proud. We wish the woman in question and her family all the very best for the future.”

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School Staff Save Teen before Lessons

Posted by cocreator on June 13, 2011
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Kathryn Hardy had just entered Hermitage High School on Tuesday morning when she collapsed. Her heart stopped beating.


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She was facedown in the stairway of the school’s gymnasium, her book bag still on her back, when physical education teacher Nancy M. Steiner arrived, responding to students’ calls for help.

Kathryn Hardy the Survivor

Steiner called for help through her two-way radio. In seconds, nurses Sandra M. Ruder and Catherine T. Brawley were assisting Hardy, who was revived with the help of an automated external defibrillator.

The 19-year-old Henrico County junior, with no history of heart disease, had suffered a cardiac arrest at about 8:40 a.m. as students were heading to their first-period classes.

Friday afternoon — a day after doctors at Bon Secours St. Mary’s Hospital installed a pacemaker on her chest that will help her control an abnormal heart rhythm — Hardy returned to Hermitage to surprise and thank the people she said saved her life.

She was smiling, energetic and looking as healthy as if nothing had happened to her just three days earlier.

“Did you save me? I can’t remember who saved me,” she told Ruder as she entered the school clinic in surprise.

“I think it’s the man upstairs,” the nurse responded and hugged her. “I’ll tell you one thing. I never ever want to see this happen to you again!”

Hardy’s father, Antonio Hardy, said his daughter is alive today thanks to the people at the school who did the right thing, including grabbing an AED and using it properly.

“I don’t think there is a word in any language to express how grateful I am,” Hardy said. “I am grateful to everybody that was involved in saving her life.”

“The students that were involved, the staff that was involved, the police officer that was involved went above and beyond what they were supposed to do,” he said.

As Ruder and Brawley arrived in the gym, they thought Hardy had fainted or had suffered a seizure, more common among teenagers, they said. But an application of ammonia didn’t help Hardy regain consciousness and her skin turned blue, the nurses said.

“At that point we knew the situation was a little bit deeper than just fainting or maybe even a seizure,” Ruder said. “Ms. Brawley and I figured she wasn’t breathing. … We could not feel her pulse whatsoever and we started CPR.”

Steiner ran to get an AED that was in the gym while Ruder, Brawley, and senior police officer Glenn “Chip” Holder tried to resuscitate Hardy. They then applied the device and it determined that a shock was needed.

After a second shock, Hardy’s pulse resumed and she was breathing. It took approximately 10 minutes from the moment Hardy collapsed to when she was resuscitated, school officials said.

Though AEDs are not required, there is at least one at every Henrico school, district spokesman Mychael Dickerson said. The devices cost roughly $1,000 and lead users through the steps needed so they can be used with little or no training.

At a school where the two nurses stay busy treating sports injuries or minor health problems, as well as keeping an eye on students with more significant health concerns, a student suffering cardiac arrest was unexpected.

“It is uncommon for a child to have cardiac arrest,” Ruder said. “Kids do have seizures. We have kids that have diabetes that pass out. … But this is the biggest thing that has ever happened to all of us.”

The closest to something similar was two years ago when a parent suffered heart failure outside the school and died, Principal Omega W. Wilson said Thursday afternoon as she recalled Tuesday’s scene at the gym.

So many things could have gone wrong, but everything happened in perfect timing and it was a true team effort, said a teary Wilson who, with Associate Principal Diane R. Saunders, was also at the scene Tuesday.

“They were the ones that brought her back to life,” Wilson said of her staff and Holder. “These are my heroes because they are humble and they saved a life. They saved the life of a child.”

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Cops Save Elderly Man in Vehicle Crash

Posted by cocreator on June 11, 2011
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Howard Grafenstein doesn’t remember what happened when his world went black, but he knows one thing.

Howard Grafenstein the Survivor

He is here, his face beaming, eyes dancing, with a wide smile and rosy cheeks, kissing his wife of 48 years, Judy, with boyish tenderness, all because a handful of wonderful people made it their business to save him.

They cared enough to make sure he made it. And they would not give up.

On Tuesday, April 26, Grafenstein, 72, was driving his pickup down Oak Street shortly before 2 p.m. on a routine visit to his dentist’s office when he suddenly blacked out near the railroad tracks and Hubbard Feed Mill.

“I had no symptoms whatsoever.” Howard said. “It’s scary.”

“[My heart] just stopped beating,” he said.

After becoming unconscious, Howard’s pickup veered off the road and struck a nearby home.

His foot was still on the accelerator and the wheels were spinning when he was initially found, according to reports taken by police.

Luckily, Howard had been driving slowly and was wearing a seat belt. He believes he did not suffer any injuries related to the crash.

Two truck drivers from the grain mill saw the crash and called 911.

“The most critical people to start with… would be those two people that made that 911 call, because had they not been there, I would have never made it,” Howard said. “These two guys called 911 right away.”

Alexandria police officers Sergeant Chad Schroeder and Patrol Officers James Ross and Jason Rosha were dispatched to the scene.

Sergeant Schroeder was the first officer to respond.

Howard was not breathing and did not have a pulse when Schroeder found him.

Schroeder pulled him out of the vehicle and performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) until Ross arrived on-scene. Ross assisted with giving him breaths while Rosha prepared the defibrillator equipment.

“The policemen actually saved his life,” Judy said. “The important thing is how soon someone responds and how quickly you get oxygen to the brain.”

What were the officers’ first thoughts when they found Howard?

Officer Ross said, “Your instincts kick in and we go to work on what we are [trained] to do. It becomes second nature.”

The men helped load Howard into the ambulance.

North Ambulance personnel used a defibrillator twice to restart Howard’s heart and took him to Douglas County Hospital. Ross continued CPR in transit.

“It is total teamwork between us and the ambulance crew,” Schroeder said.

After arriving at the hospital, Howard was airlifted to St. Cloud Hospital.

Sergeant Schroeder went to the Grafensteins’ home to tell Judy her husband had been involved in an accident.

“He was so calm,” Judy said of Schroeder.

She praised the Alexandria Police Department.

“I have to tell you – the police department – how really truly wonderful they were.”

Schroeder told her right away that Howard was breathing again and his heart was beating. He said Howard was probably already in the air on his way to St. Cloud for treatment.

Pastor Michael Neumann from the couple’s church, St. Paul’s Lutheran in Alexandria, drove Judy to St. Cloud.

Doctors later determined that Grafenstein, a former Stevens County FSA director, suffered cardiac arrest. Doctors believed the arrest was caused by an arrhythmia because no blockage to his heart was detected.

“Either he’ll come out of it right away and be all right,” she remembered thinking, “or he may come out of it and it may take several weeks of therapy and things to get back to where [he was]. He may not come out of it at all, or it may take days for him to come out of it.”

Twenty-four hours passed before Judy and the physicians knew whether Howard was responding to the treatment.

“There were some scary moments in there,” she said.

But Howard’s condition improved rapidly.

“By that Saturday, he was right back. He knew everything. He knew everybody.”

Howard also had a pacemaker and defibrillator implanted to prevent a similar event from recurring. He spent a total of 10 days in the hospital recovering.

The Grafensteins felt certain God was responsible for Howard’s rescue and recovery.

From the workers in the vicinity of the crash who called 911, the assistance of the police officers, to the availability of the air ambulance, the Grafensteins believe God was watching over them during that time.

“I have never ever seen anybody by that street before,” Howard said of the area where his car rolled off the roadway. “It’s not very well traveled.”

And Judy said: “There’s a whole bunch of kind of little miraculous things that went on through this whole thing because the people were in place every step of the way.”

Judy explained if Howard had been home when his heart stopped instead of out driving, he may not have survived.

“I was out getting groceries and [Howard] would have been alone. His heart would not have started again by itself. It had to have either the CPR or the combination of CPR and the shock to bring him back.”

“Everything – all the stars were in line for Howard that day,” Sergeant Schroeder said.

“Faith is important to me and it makes me think,” Officer Ross said. “You always step back a bit and see how lucky we are to have our health and family.”

BRIGHT FUTURE AHEAD

Howard believes he will make a full recovery and return to working part time as a crop adjustor for RCIS.

He received a “clean bill of health,” from his cardiologist, according to Judy and has started driving again.

“I’ve been out walking and shopping and been visiting and running around and kind of doing a little bit of everything,” he said.

He looks forward to going bike riding soon.

Howard was one of the lucky ones. The policemen told Judy that many times people do not experience such a positive ending.

After coming so close to death, has Howard’s outlook on life changed in any way?

“I always did appreciate everything,” he said.

The couple has three children and six grandchildren.

Judy could not suppress her gratitude for the people who saved Howard.

“I just can’t say enough good about the policemen because they were so kind, so helpful – just so compassionate,” she said. “We just really want them to have credit.”

The officers were glad to learn Howard is experiencing an excellent recovery.

“It is a relief to hear of a good outcome and know that Howard is doing really well,” he said. “It makes you smile when you think about it.”

How does it feel to be called a hero?

“I don’t see it as being heroic at all,” Schroeder said. “We are just doing our job.”

And the couple would like to thank the men that made that first crucial call to 911.

“Whoever those two mystery people were,” Howard said.

Judy called the Alexandria Police Department to personally thank the officers for saving her husband’s life. She asked what she could do for them in return.

Schroeder answered, “Just calling us and thanking us was all you need to do.”

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Custodian & Paramedics Saves Man in Park Festival

Posted by cocreator on June 11, 2011
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Saturday morning was hot and muggy, and Hart Park was full of people dancing, performing feats of strength and wheezing into bagpipes at the Scottish Fest Highland Games – many of them wearing wool clothing. It seems that something was almost bound to happen.


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Jim Fork was doing his normal duty on an abnormal day as one of three city custodians who maintain the park from dawn until after dark seven days a week.

Jim Fork the Saviour

On Saturdays, “I’m the only person on the grounds from 8 until 4,” Fork said. “We’re involved with all facets of the park, many that go beyond the janitorial. And I guess I encountered one of those last Saturday.”

Fork was inside the Muellner Building, walking up the hallway toward the custodians’ office to get a drink, when he ran into Dave Berger, one of the Games coordinators.

“Dave just kind of remarked that someone in the event was having a heart attack,” Fork said. “I said, ‘What, somebody’s having a heart attack in my park?’”

Fork reversed course and headed for the lobby, where he ran into another event organizer who was calling out for assistance and, in particular, for an emergency defibrillator if there was one on the premises.

Turns out there was, about 20 feet away but inside the locked doors of the Hart Park Senior Center. And the man had bumped into the only person who had a key.

“In my mind this is getting a little blown out of proportion,” Fork said of his role, “because all I did was hand him the defibrillator. I handed it to him and he ran, and I ran, just to see if there was anything more I could do. I came into this scene of a mass of people.”

A 49-year-old bagpiper from Northern Illinois lay on the ground, already receiving CPR, but his heart had stopped and he was not responding.

“He was ash-white,” Fork said. “A larger man. They shocked him twice, and the second time his heart started. I saw some color come back, and then the paramedics arrived, they got him on the back board and took him to the hospital.

“I understand he was discharged Sunday.”

Fork was only one of a number of people whose actions helped save a life, and that line stretches beyond the park.

“There were police on the grounds, and they made the call to the medical unit,” Fork said. “There was the EMT (emergency medical technician) with the Games – ‘Flash’ Gordon – and another guy who must also have been an EMT who was just riding through the park with his children, and he pitched in, too.

“I just kind of stood there. I was part of a chain of events. But I could have been out in the park. I had been out in the park. The morning was passing like lightning, it was pandemonium.

“I guess I was in the right place at the right time.”

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