Staff Save Elderly Regular at Recreation Center

Posted by cocreator on April 11, 2012
Events

Wayne Klinger, 71, a regular at the center, was in the weight room doing his morning workout when he collapsed at one of the machines.


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Another patron quickly alerted staff and while a 911 call went out, Marchand ran to evaluate Klinger’s condition.

Wayne Klinger the Survivor

With the help of other people who were working out nearby, Klinger was moved to a firm, flat surface, and Assistant Director Jamie Henkel began CPR while Marchand retrieved the defibrillator.

Henkel was the right person for the job, Marchand said.

“Jamie has been with us about six months, and she had just finished doing CPR training with our lifeguards.” The center’s staff receives regular CPR training from the Mitchell Fire Division, he said.

Henkel quickly put the AED’s paddles on Klinger’s bare chest. The device automatically monitors its subject, and if necessary, administers a shock to restore a regular heartbeat.

It was necessary in Klinger’s case, and the AED shocked him until it got a pulse, Marchand said.

“It shocked him once, and then we found a pulse and he took one huge breath,” Henkel said. “I know I have been sleeping a lot better since I saw his face again.”

Henkel said this was the first time the Medtronic Lifepak defibrillator has been used at the Mitchell Recreation Center since it was installed about five years ago.

“It’s an incredible piece of equipment,” Marchand said.

An artificial electronic voice on the AED tells the user exactly how to proceed and where to place the electronic paddles on the victim’s chest.

“It gives you step-by-step instructions and walks you right through it,” Marchand said.

Klinger wasn’t conscious, but by the time the paramedics rolled him out of the center, the defibrillator had re-established a regular pulse. He was flown to Sioux Falls for further treatment.

Remarkably, Klinger walked into the Rec Center the next Monday, ready for a light workout. That was prior to his second, more serious episode, and Klinger said he was feeling remarkably good.

“It was a pretty emotional experience for all of us when he walked through that door,” Marchand said.

Klinger likes to stay busy. A former owner of Business Products Inc. in Mitchell, he still works part-time as a salesman for BPI.

Up until his collapse at the center, he had always enjoyed good health.

“I never had an issue with my heart,” he said. “I had good blood pressure, low cholesterol and since my 40s I worked out at the center five days a week.”

He plans to take it slower until he completes his cardiac rehab program, but he believes his experience can help others.

“For me, all the right people were in the right place at the right time. My goal is to encourage people to get busy and get these AEDs in all their buildings and have someone trained to use them.

“I mean, how do you put a value on human life?”

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