Football

Teens Save Referee at Football Game

Posted by cocreator on December 08, 2010
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Student trainers are usually worried about the players on the field. But last week several Lafayette teens came to the rescue of someone unexpected. A referee at a football game Wednesday night collapsed on the side lines, and the LHS student trainers immediately sprang into action.


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“We teach them CPR, we teach them how to use the AED, we teach them basic life support,” said Jennifer Morrow, Co-Director of the LHS Medical Careers Academy.

Morrow was there the night Kenny Henry suffered from a heart attack and cardiac arrest while officiating a game. She says she couldn’t be more proud of the high school girls who put their skills and training into action.

“It was very scary but we were going to do everything we could to help him to make sure he would survive,” said Kelci Lions, one of the student trainers.

Lions, along with Kennen Granger, Natalie White and Claire Black immediately followed their emergency action plan by calling an ambulance, blocking off and clearing the scene and getting the Automatic External Defibrillator, or AED.

“It’s analyzing it and telling you if the heart rate is good or not, and whether or not that person needs to be shocked. And if it does then everybody stands back and it shocks the person and it revives them,” explained Lions.

Henry’s heart had to be shocked twice to revive him. He was then rushed to the hospital where he underwent emergency surgery. It was the girls’ teamwork that got him to the hospital in time.

“They knew exactly what to do, they got it all done I didn’t even have to tell them a thing, they just jumped into action,” said LHS Certified Trainer Aimee Gros.

And their quick thinking is the reason Henry is alive today.

“It puts things in perspective. We don’t just give people water, bad things can happen and we have to be there,” said student Claire Black.

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Coaches & Cop Save High School Footballer during Practice

Posted by cocreator on September 09, 2010
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A football player collapsed during practice at Spruce Creek High School and was taken to a hospital.


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The boy was identified by teammates as defensive lineman Jordan Peterson, a senior. He was hit in the chest by another defensive lineman during a drill and fell to the ground in cardiac arrest.

Volusia County rescue workers received a 911 call about 5:55 p.m. about an injury at the Port Orange school. The caller said an athletic trainer was performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation on the player, Smith said. With the trainer’s help, n off-duty police officer and an assistant coached zused an automated external defibrillator donated by Port Orange Fire Rescue to restart the boy’s heart, witnesses and officials said.

Defensive lineman Shayne Laidler said the two players rolled over after the tackle, and nothing initially seemed out of the ordinary. Then Jordan walked about 10 feet away, went down on one knee and appeared to be catching his breath, Shayne said. One of the coaches asked if he was OK, and Jordan waved him off, then rolled over onto his back, Shayne said.

Jordan Petersen the Survivor

A few seconds later, a coach walked over and asked if Jordan was all right and got no response.

“I saw it happen,” said Dillon Cheney, a football player. “I guess he just got hit in the chest the wrong way and when he got hit, I guess all the air came out of him and he went like ‘ahhh.’ And then he like laid there and we thought he was fine, but he never got back up.”

Jordan Peterson was taken to Halifax Medical Center in critical condition, but he is now listed in good condition.

Hospital officials said Peterson came out of a medically induced coma alert and talking.

Updates

“I feel very tired,” Jordan said Wednesday from his home in Port Orange. “I don’t feel a whole lot weaker than I was [before]. I just feel like it was a bad day.”

“I’m feeling greatly improved,” the teen said. “Not yet 100 percent, but feeling a lot better.”

“I guess I’m going to be a motivational speaker if I can’t be a contributor,” Jordan said. “I’m going to miss playing football, but what I will miss most is being around the team.”

Although does not remember the hit during practice, he does remember having the fingers on his left hand taped before that day’s practice.

While the trainer applied tape, Jordan noticed an unfamiliar machine nearby and asked what it was.

The trainer said it was a defibrillator, a device used to start a heart after it stops.

“Have you ever had to use it?” Jordan asked.

“No,” the trainer said.

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Coach Save Football Player during Practice

Posted by cocreator on August 23, 2010
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A Pearl City J.V. football player collapsed during practice today, but thanks to a fast acting trainer he was able to be revived.

The team’s coach says a 9th-grade offensive tackle, was doing hitting drills head-to-head with another player when he suddenly collapsed.

A trainer at the practice ran to grab an automated external defibrillator or AED.

“Once we realized he stopped breathing, the trainer was right there right by the hill so his quick response actually helped save him,” said J.V. headcoach Jerry Arrayan.

“We hooked him up and he started coming around but i still had to do some CPR and eventually the pulse came back,” said athelectic heath care trainer Colin Lee.

The player was taken to the hospital in serious condition.

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Coaches Save Student during Football Drills

Posted by cocreator on March 31, 2010
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The players panicked as they surrounded an unconscious Jonathan Moore on the football field outside Pearland’s Glenda Dawson High School on March 3.

Jonathan Moore the Survivor

Jonathan Moore the Survivor

A minute before, the 16-year-old had been running with his teammates prepping for football practice. But Jonathan, a husky fullback and defensive tackle, suddenly collapsed.

His heart had stopped beating. He had no pulse.

Team trainers Matt Thomas and Chris Shaddock hurried to Jonathan’s side and began CPR.

Thomas grabbed the school’s automatic external defibrillator and used it on Moore to restart his heart.

It started beating again and paramedics rushed the teen to Children’s Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston.

“I was sure he was dead,” Shaddock said.

Jonathan barely remembers anything from the day he collapsed. Someone told him he was doing a good job, but a few days later he found himself lying in a hospital bed, scared and confused.

Jonathan said, “Collapsed, passed out, actually died and Shadack and other trainers brought me back.”

“l’m very grateful for Pearland ISD, the trainers and all the doctors here,” said Jonathan’s mother Vanessa Williams.

Thomas and Shaddock said they weren’t really heroes. They were just doing what they were trained to.

“It was a team effort,” Shaddock said.

Cardiologists at Children’s Memorial Hermann implanted an internal defibrillator to regulate Jonathan’s heartbeat.

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Talk Show Host & Doctor Save Doctor during Football

Posted by cocreator on December 01, 2009
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Dan Caplis, Denver lawyer best known as a conservative talk-show host and Ches Thompson, a 48-year-old ob/gyn, hadn’t actually met while they and about five other dads were playing football with their kids on the sunny Thanksgiving afternoon.

Thompson suddenly lurched forward and fell on his face.

Dr. Scott Bainbridge, a spine specialist also playing in the game, rolled Thompson onto his back, checked his signs and started CPR in the muddy field.

Dan Caplis the Saviour

Dan Caplis the Saviour

Caplis, meantime, bolted to his SUV. By the time he returned with his defibrillator, Thompson was flatlining.

“Stay calm. Follow these voice instructions. Make sure 911 is called now. Begin by exposing patient’s bare chest and torso,” began the recorded voice in the machine.

Caplis followed the cues, placed the pads on Thompson’s chest and stood back as the AED shocked him with power Caplis describes as “ferocious.”

“Waiting to see if he would react, those were the longest seconds of my life,” he says.

Before Caplis and Bainbridge attached the AED to Thompson, he wasn’t breathing and didn’t have a pulse. According to Cherry Hills Village Police it took only one shock from the AED to resuscitate Dr. Thompson.

Thompson regained consciousness quickly and strongly. The father of two boys is expected to make a full recovery at Swedish Medical Center for treatment. .

“I was in the right place at the right time with the right people,” he said Monday.

“It would have felt so incredibly helpless to have been there without the machine,” adds Caplis, co-host of KHOW’s Caplis and Craig Silverman show. He’s had the defibrillator for a year and a half because of another of his jobs, as a little league baseball coach.

“You can know nothing about CPR or AEDs and they can still save somone. They’re that good,” he said.

Updates

Tradition in the Hereford clan holds that the family that hosts Thanksgiving dinner prepares the big bird.

Ches Thompson the Survivor

But when everyone convened Thursday afternoon, Ches Thompson brought the turkey along with him.

“It’s fair,” jokes John Hereford, Thompson’s brother-in-law. “He didn’t do crap last year.”

“I put the turkey in the oven,” Thompson counters. “I just didn’t turn it off.”

To be sure, Thompson a year ago was a little preoccupied. After starting the culinary preparations, the Englewood resident went out to play in the annual neighborhood Turkey Bowl football game.

The game ended when Thompson collapsed face-first onto the field, the victim of a heart attack. As Thompson says, when one considers the alternatives, being forced to break with tradition isn’t really so bad.

After all, he was around to return to this year’s game and be part of the Thanksgiving celebration. Then there’s the rest of the holiday season, and, just a couple of weeks after Christmas, his 50th birthday.

“You meet people who go, ‘Oh, I don’t have birthdays anymore.’ Or ‘Oh, I stopped having them when I was 40,’ ” Thompson says. “But to me, having birthdays is great. This is a good thing; I don’t care if I’m turning 50, 51 or 61.

“Being here for birthdays, for kids’ graduations, to see them get married, hopefully see them have children — those are all things you want to be around for.”

On Wednesday night there was a smaller gathering at Glenmoor Country Club, a little dinner to honor those mainly responsible for assisting Thompson during his predicament — “the savers,” he calls them.

That group includes Scott Bainbridge, a doctor who performed CPR on Thompson while another participant in the game, radio talk-show host and lawyer Dan Caplis, grabbed from his truck an automated external defibrillator, or AED, to jolt Thompson’s heart back to life.

Before last year’s contest, Thompson and Caplis hadn’t met. Now they’re bonded for life.

Caplis says returning to the game — renamed the Defib Bowl and played out on a big field behind the home of one of Thompson’s neighbors — “will be very surreal.”

“But,” he adds, “I wouldn’t miss it for the world.”

Fortunately, neither would Thompson, who finds himself wondering how one measures good fortune — and what one does when Fate smiles upon you with a second chance.

As he says, it’s not exactly a case of a devious Wall Street financier who has an epiphany and decides to mend his evil ways, giving all his money to charity and going to work in a soup kitchen.

Thompson, an ob-gyn at University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora, has certainly been beneficial to scores of area families.

“I felt like I was already giving back,” he says.

Perhaps the change can be measured in smaller ways, he continues — stopping to talk instead of rushing off to clear the table and get back to work and the Xbox after dinner, or making sure that vacations indeed become the lasting memories that families wax poetically about.

“My outlook on life is definitely different; you try not to sweat the small stuff,” he says. “Every day is a gift. The kids leave the dirty dishes on the counter, and, before, you’re going, ‘Arrrgh, why do they do that stuff?’ Now, it’s ‘Who cares?’ There are bigger things to be concerned about.

“I don’t think about how serious it was; it was life and death, and that’s daunting stuff,” he says. “I realize how fortunate I was, that it was a miracle. But on a more constant basis, you realize where your priorities and values are in life. Obviously, you want to come out of this a better person. Hopefully, I have.”

John Hereford says that whenever he hears about someone’s good fortune, like buying a winning lottery ticket, he’s reminded of what happened last year.

“I just want to say, ‘Oh, yeah, you think you’re lucky? Look at this,’ ” he says. “The odds of this were so much higher, we were so much luckier.”

The only reason Caplis had the AED in his truck was because of his involvement in a lawsuit stemming from a Montana case two years earlier in which a high school football player collapsed and died during practice.

Caplis, who had been playing in the Turkey Bowl for the first time last year, had actually left and gone home.

His son Joe, then a sixth-grader, was having such a great time competing against the big guys that he insisted on staying. So Joe was supposed to get a ride home with someone else, but at the last moment, Caplis decided to return to get in a few final plays himself. He arrived back at the field just moments before the incident.

Similarly, Bainbridge had planned on leaving about 20 minutes earlier but stayed when he couldn’t drag his son off the field.

In the mad scramble that ensued after the heart attack, Thompson’s friends and family frantically called around, asking what doctor they should try to find to take care of him. The name that kept coming up was Roger Damle.

Coincidentally, when the ambulance carrying Thompson arrived at Swedish, Damle was the cardiologist on call.

In something of a deliciously ironic twist, those not at the hospital found themselves gravitating to the home of a family friend, Democratic U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet, a frequent target of the conservative Caplis.

“The odds involved were unreal,” Hereford says with a laugh. “I just hope it hasn’t sucked all the good luck out of our family for the next six generations to come.”

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