مجبور به مرد حمله قلبی در فروشگاه مواد غذایی را در دهستان مینه سوتا، 20 نفر اندود و انجام CPR در او برای بیش از یک ساعت و نیم تا متخصصین وارد شده اند و او جان سالم به در.

مجبور به مرد حمله قلبی در فروشگاه مواد غذایی را در دهستان مینه سوتا، 20 نفر اندود و انجام CPR در او برای بیش از یک ساعت و نیم تا متخصصین وارد شده اند و او جان سالم به در.

خرید فیلترشکن

29 دیدگاه برای “مجبور به مرد حمله قلبی در فروشگاه مواد غذایی را در دهستان مینه سوتا، 20 نفر اندود و انجام CPR در او برای بیش از یک ساعت و نیم تا متخصصین وارد شده اند و او جان سالم به در.”

  1. I can only hope this went like the scene from Airplane!, except everyone was waiting their turn to do increasingly vigorous CPR.

  2. *The marathon CPR went on for 96 minutes. First responders shocked Snitzer’s heart 12 times, and they administered intravenous drugs. When they finally had a pulse and a regular heart beat Snitzer was airlifted to the Mayo Clinic.*

    *After 10 days, he was released from the hospital — miraculously healthy, and incredibly grateful.*

    *”I feel like I have a responsibility to them to live the best life possible and honor the effort they made,” Snitzer said.*

    Heartwarming story. CPR done correctly can be tiring, good on these people.

  3. How long will paramedics try bringing someone back before calling it. This story hurts, my dad died from a heart attack after diving and i swear they only tried for 15 minutes before calling it

  4. In Wilderness First Responder training they told us a similar story about a boyscout troop who saved their scoutmaster’s life by performing CPR for over an hour until help came after he collapsed on a hike. If you’re ever in a situation like this don’t stop CPR.

  5. There was an event from back in 2003 that had a similar feel.

    Ms. Dorothy Fletcher was on a a flight from Manchester to Florida so that she could attend her daughter’s wedding. While en route, she suffered a heart attack, and when the attendants asked if there was a doctor on board. As luck would have it, there were several physicians on the flight…fifteen cardiologists who were on their way to a conference.

    The physicians began treating her using the onboard medical kit, and stabalized her condition while the plane was diverted to North Carolina, where Ms. Fletcher was in ICU for two days, but survived the ordeal.

    There really isn’t a good time to suffer a heart attack, but this is probably about as close as you can get.

    Edit: Link to the story. [https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1450662/Heart-woman-saved-by-15-flying-doctors.html](https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1450662/Heart-woman-saved-by-15-flying-doctors.html)

  6. The part they don’t tell you is that they played stayin’ alive the entire time

  7. Of course 20 people lined up, it was the only thing going on in town that week

  8. He got the mono don’t cha know, they suspect he got it from those Swanson boys… they kept cutting the line to have another go at the poor fella.

  9. How much of the 10 days in the hospital was spent repairing an hour and half of CPR?

  10. I work at a grocery store and we had someone have a seizure in one of our aisles. Fell to the floor and everything. Our manager went over to help. When he came back he said the lady told him to not call the ambulance because this is only the second time it had happened to her recently and because she didn’t have health insurance/ the money to go to a hospital right now. The paramedics eventually convinced her to go but it just makes me sad to see people having serious medical problems opt to not go to the doctors just simply because they can’t afford health care

  11. ok, I get the whole “rural Minnesota” concept.. but in all seriousness – assuming clear roads and weather… not some blizzard or something… how far the fuck in the middle of nowhere can you possibly be that you’re 90 minutes away from any sort of help, that’s traveling at emergency response speed? At that point why wasn’t a medivac requested instead? That seems wonky.

  12. A (somewhat) similar thing happened with my mother about 10yrs ago.

    She was an employee at Wal-Mart in the meat department, and she was being trained on the registers so that she could eventually become a department manager. First day on the register, nervous as heck, and coupled with a pre-existing arrhythmia… she has a heart attack right in the middle of the store.

    Fortunately several things went her way. First was that the HR manager was up front at the customer service desk (about 20ft away). She was trained in CPR and rushed over there to save her. There also just so happened to be a hospital right next door, so a couple paramedics were able to get there with a gurney in a matter of minutes. *Also* the hospital next door just so happened to have an air ambulance helicopter parked there which rarely happens (it’s a small hospital and the choppers usually don’t bother stopping unless they’re specifically needed there). So they were able to get her flown to a trauma center immediately.

    All of those things just happened to play out the way they did, and my mom is alive because of it. If none of those thing had happened she likely wouldn’t be around today.

  13. Best daily phone notification popup I’ve had in a while. This put a smile on my face. Thank you for sharing.

  14. This is human. We are pretty much hardwired to do this even for people we don’t know. The day we stop doing it would be the beginning of the end of our species.

    For social species like us “survival of the fittest” should be interpreted not for the individual but for the entire species. On our own we are neither the fittest nor the strongest. On his own even our strongest is more fragile than he would want to admit.

    We are on top of the food chain thanks to what we become of when we come together, we will stay there so long as we stand up for one another.

  15. Meanwhile, in NYC I got yelled at by a lady on my subway for hitting the emergency button for a fellow passenger who had passed out on her feet. “Don’t press it, you’re going to make us all late!”

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