ReportWire

Tag: cardiac arrest

  • A 10% chance for survival. Fort Worth expects this tool will change the odds

    [ad_1]

    Cassandra Walker practices chest compressions during a CPR class at the Pat May Center in Bedford on Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024.

    Cassandra Walker practices chest compressions during a CPR class at the Pat May Center in Bedford on Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024.

    ctorres@star-telegram.com

    About one-quarter of Fort Worth Police patrol cars will soon be equipped with automated external defibrillators, a tool that can be used to save lives when a cardiac arrest strikes.

    Ultimately, the department hopes to equip all of its 450 patrol cars with AEDs so that officers can respond in the event of a cardiac arrest, said Cynthia Wood, public information officer for the department.

    Cardiac arrest occurs when a person’s heart stops beating unexpectedly, which in turn stops blood flow to the brain and other organs. It is different from a heart attack, which occurs when there is a blockage in blood flow to the heart. The American Heart Association estimates that more than 350,000 cardiac arrests occur outside of hospitals every year, with the vast majority of those cardiac arrests being fatal. Nationwide, the average survival rate is 10.2%, according to the American Heart Association.

    Ask any expert about the key to improving that dismal survival rate, and they’ll give you the same answer: time.

    “Cardiac arrest is the most time-sensitive disease in all of medicine,” said Dr. Benjamin Abella, the system chair of the department of emergency medicine at the Mount Sinai Health System.

    “Time is the enemy,” said Dr. Thomas Rea, professor of medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine. “Every minute that goes by without definitive care is a 10% decrease in the likelihood that that patient will survive.”

    The thinking behind equipping Fort Worth patrol cars with AEDs is that it will help those suffering a cardiac arrest get access to potentially life-saving shocks sooner. Police officers are sometimes the first responders to an emergency medical call, and get there before emergency medical services, Wood said. In those cases, if officers can respond with an AED before a member of the public or emergency medical responders can, they might save a life.

    The initiative was born out of the American Heart Association’s Nation of Lifesavers, a Tarrant County group working to improve cardiac arrest survival rates. Tarrant County is one of three communities in the U.S. selected by the American Heart Association to improve survival rates, and the Nation of Lifesavers committee has convened leaders from local schools, first responders, the business community, and local government to tackle the problem.

    During a meeting focused on improving survival rates, an officer with the Fort Worth Police Department recommended equipping patrol cars, in part because the AED at the Bob Bolen Public Safety Complex has been used successfully four times, Wood said.

    The first 115 AEDs will be paid for by foundations, including the Amon G. Carter Foundation, the Sid W. Richardson Foundation and BNSF Railway, according to a news release.

    ⭐ Our editors also recommend:

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ciara McCarthy

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ciara McCarthy covers health and wellness as part of the Star-Telegram’s Crossroads Lab. She came to Fort Worth after three years in Victoria, Texas, where she worked at the Victoria Advocate. Ciara is focused on equipping people and communities with information they need to make decisions about their lives and well-being. Please reach out with your questions about public health or the health care system. Email cmccarthy@star-telegram.com or call or text 817-203-4391.

    [ad_2]

    Ciara McCarthy

    Source link

  • Shoveling snow? Over-exertion and cold temps can raise your heart risks

    [ad_1]

    Shoveling snow? Over-exertion and cold temps can raise your heart risks

    ON SATURDAY. TIP OFF FOR THAT GAME IS EIGHT. MIGHT HAVE TO DIG OUT IF YOU’RE HEADED TO THAT GAME. THE SNOW STILL FALLING. BUT FOR A LOT OF US MAYBE ALREADY STARTED OR WILL CONTINUE DOING IS THAT TASK OF SHOVELING. AND WHILE IT MAY BE LIGHT SNOW, THERE ARE STILL IMPORTANT HEALTH REMINDERS TO KEEP IN MIND. DOCTOR JORGE PLUTZKY IS THE DIRECTOR OF PREVENTATIVE CARDIOLOGY AT BRIGHAM AND WOMEN’S HOSPITAL. DOCTOR PLUTZKY, THANKS SO MUCH FOR BEING HERE WITH US THIS MORNING. SURE. THANK YOU. WHAT DO YOU WORRY ABOUT MOST WHEN YOU THINK ABOUT PEOPLE WHO ARE HEADING OUT TO MOVE ALL OF THAT SNOW AROUND? WELL, FOR SOME PEOPLE, IT MAY BE THE FIRST TIME THEY’RE EXERTING THEMSELVES TO THAT LEVEL. AND WE KNOW THAT SHOVELING SNOW IS A VERY HIGH LEVEL OF EXERTION. YOU CAN VERY QUICKLY. STUDIES SUGGEST WITHIN TEN MINUTES REACH 100% OF YOUR MAXIMUM HEART RATE. AND SO FOR PEOPLE WITH A HISTORY OF HEART DISEASE OR JUST RISK FACTORS, THAT CAN BE QUITE AN EXERTION. IT’S LIKE SETTLING, DOING A MAXIMAL STRESS TEST AND BRINGING ON ISSUES RELATED TO THAT. DOC, WHAT ARE SOME OF THE WARNING SIGNS THAT FOLKS OUT THERE MIGHT BE? YOU KNOW, WE TOUGH NEW ENGLANDERS WILL SAY, WELL, WE’LL WORK THROUGH IT. BUT, YOU KNOW, THERE ARE SIGNS THAT SOMETHING MAY BE SERIOUSLY HAPPENING AND YOU NEED TO BE ABLE TO TAKE A BREAK, HEAD ON INSIDE FOR A BIT. YES. YOU KNOW, THE CLASSIC SIGNS OF CHEST PAIN AND PERHAPS ASSOCIATED SHORTNESS OF BREATH, NAUSEA, RADIATION DOWN THE ARMS ARE CERTAINLY VERY VALID. BUT WE ALSO WANT PEOPLE TO PAY ATTENTION TO MORE SUBTLE SIGNS LIKE CHEST PRESSURE, ACHING IN THE JAW, JUST THE THE NAUSEA CAN STILL BE RELEVANT. AND SO LISTENING TO YOUR BODY SLOWING DOWN, TAKING BREAKS AND STOPPING IF YOU’RE FEELING ANY OF THOSE IS GOOD ADVICE AND HIGHLY WARRANTED, ESPECIALLY WHEN YOU’RE OUT THERE IN THE COLD, WHICH MAY BE ITS OWN FACTOR FOR WHY THESE ISSUES ARISE. THE COLD CAN CONSTRICT ARTERIES AND MAKE THINGS WORSE, AND THERE REALLY IS NO MESSING AROUND WITH THIS. AND WE KNOW HEART ISSUES PRESENT DIFFERENTLY. BUT ARE THERE? AND MAYBE YOU JUST SPOKE ABOUT THIS MORE SUBTLE SIGNS THAT PEOPLE SHOULD PAY ATTENTION TO DURING THIS KIND OF WEATHER. YEAH, IT’S THINGS LIKE I’M FEELING MORE SHORT OF BREATH THAN I THAN I WOULD EXPECT TO BE. I’M HAVING AN ACHE IN MY JAW OR IN MY NECK THAT IS SURPRISING AND FEELS DIFFERENT. THESE ARE ALL SIGNS TO PAY ATTENTION TO AND TO NOT PUSH IT, TO SORT THAT OUT. THE. THERE ARE VARIOUS STRATEGIES PEOPLE CAN TAKE TO HAVE LESS OF A LOAD, LIKE TAKING BREAKS, COVERING YOUR MOUTH SO YOU WARM THE AIR THAT’S ON ITS WAY IN TO NOT NECESSARILY SHOVEL AND LIFT, BECAUSE USING YOUR ARMS IS MORE OF AN EXERTION, BUT TO PUSH AND TO TO SWIPE. BUT YOU REALLY DO WANT TO LISTEN TO ANY, ANY SENSE YOU HAVE THAT SOMETHING’S OFF. INCLUDING THESE OTHER, YOU KNOW, SOMEWHAT ATYPICAL SYMPTOMS THAT AREN’T CLASSIC CHEST PAIN. EVEN THAT CHEST PRESSURE CAN BE A SIGN. IT’S BEEN FOUR YEARS SINCE WE HAD THIS AMOUNT OF SNOW, SO MAYBE FOLKS HAVEN’T HAD TO FACE IT FOR A WHILE. DOCTOR GEORGE, THANK YOU VERY MUCH. CARDIOLOGIST WITH MASS GENERAL BRIGHAM, WE THANK YOU FOR JOINING US THIS MORNING.

    Digging out from the weekend’s massive snow and ice storm could be hazardous to your heart.Pennsylvania health officials announced three snow-removal-related deaths on Sunday. All were between the ages of 60 and 84. The Lehigh County coroner’s office cautioned people to take breaks and avoid over-exerting themselves.Shoveling snow is heavy, hard work — research has shown that doing it for even a short time can make the heart work as hard as it does during a major workout. Adding to that stress, the cold temperatures cause blood vessels, including those feeding the heart, to constrict. That raises blood pressure, which in turn increases the risk of a heart attack, stroke, or cardiac arrest, according to the American Heart Association.Snow shoveling is especially risky for anyone with known heart disease or who’s already survived a heart attack, as well as older adults and people with risk factors, including high blood pressure or cholesterol. People who think they’re healthy can get in trouble, too, with that combination of heavy exertion in cold weather – especially if they’re generally sedentary until a snowstorm comes along.The heart association advises that if you have to shovel, go slow and try to push the snow instead of lifting and throwing it. It also urges people to learn common warning signs of a heart attack and to call 911 if they experience them.

    Digging out from the weekend’s massive snow and ice storm could be hazardous to your heart.

    Pennsylvania health officials announced three snow-removal-related deaths on Sunday. All were between the ages of 60 and 84. The Lehigh County coroner’s office cautioned people to take breaks and avoid over-exerting themselves.

    Shoveling snow is heavy, hard work — research has shown that doing it for even a short time can make the heart work as hard as it does during a major workout. Adding to that stress, the cold temperatures cause blood vessels, including those feeding the heart, to constrict. That raises blood pressure, which in turn increases the risk of a heart attack, stroke, or cardiac arrest, according to the American Heart Association.

    Snow shoveling is especially risky for anyone with known heart disease or who’s already survived a heart attack, as well as older adults and people with risk factors, including high blood pressure or cholesterol. People who think they’re healthy can get in trouble, too, with that combination of heavy exertion in cold weather – especially if they’re generally sedentary until a snowstorm comes along.

    The heart association advises that if you have to shovel, go slow and try to push the snow instead of lifting and throwing it. It also urges people to learn common warning signs of a heart attack and to call 911 if they experience them.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Dad says Cleveland High player able to walk on his own after suffering cardiac arrest during game

    [ad_1]

    A Cleveland High School football player is recovering after suffering a medical emergency during the second half of the Rams’ win at Southeast Raleigh on Friday night.

    Senior wide receiver Krisjon Clark had to be resuscitated on the field after going into cardiac arrest during HighSchoolOT’s Game of the Week.

    Clark left the game in an ambulance after he was hit by two defenders while trying to bring in a short pass with 5:39 left in the third quarter. 

    According to Cleveland coach Scott Riley, Clark was not breathing when the medical team first got to him and began doing compressions. WRAL later confirmed that Clark went into cardiac arrest. Before he was taken to the hospital in an ambulance, Riley said a defibrillator detected a faint pulse and Clark became more alert and even wanted to stand up.

    “He was just lifeless,” said his father, Kris Clark, who added he jumped over the fence separating the grandstand from the players and ran to the other side of the field to check on his son. He ended up having to do chest compressions on Krisjon in an urgent call to action.

    “I took over doing compressions at one point,” said Kris Clark, who is the principal at Fuquay-Varina Middle School. “Then they instructed us to back up, and then the AED administered a shock. And that’s when I think there was another doctor, I think, to my right, and he said he felt a pulse, and he started breathing. That’s when he kind of came back, and his heart started beating again.”

    Kris Clark told WRAL News that Krisjon was released from the hospital on Sunday. He was able to walk on his own and the family attended church on Sunday morning.

    It was hard to stay focused and calm in that moment, which was scary for everyone, not just those closest to Krisjon.

    “I kind of pride myself on being able to keep my composure in heightened situations,” said Kris Clark. “And so it is definitely different when it’s your own kid. And you know, I’ve done the CPR and the AED training, you know, probably six or seven times now, not thinking that one day I may have to use this on my own kid, but that’s what happened on Friday.”

    Kris Clark said the family is grateful for the outpouring of support they’ve seen since the injury. He thanked the medical staff and coaches who worked to ensure Krisjon had proper care. He had no complications and tests came back normal. Krisjon won’t play until he’s been cleared by a doctor.

    “We’ve received nothing but love and support,” Kris Clark said. “I’ve been getting text messages left and right. He’s getting text messages left and right. My wife is receiving them. Thank you to everyone who’s been praying for us.”

    After a discussion over whether to finish the game, the teams decided to continue playing. Cleveland held on to win its 60th straight regular-season game in a 28-10 final.

    It’s the emotional toll that is tough for him
    right now,” said the father. “Because, you know, he’s reminding and people are sharing with them,
    you know, that they thought they were going to lose him.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Scary moments then applause after player goes down at Southeast Raleigh football game

    [ad_1]

    A high school football player from Cleveland High School was taken to the hospital after going into cardiac arrest on Friday night during High School OT’s game of the week.

    Wake EMS was called to Southeast Raleigh Magnet High School during the varsity football game against Cleveland.

    According to the High School OT announcer, the athlete took a big hit during the game before going down, and medics began chest compressions on the field. Soon after, the crowd is heard erupting into applause.

    “You never want to see that,” the announcer said. 

     Officials said the athlete was taken to the hospital and does have a pulse.

    WRAL News is working to confirm the student athlete’s current condition.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • New helicopter program speeds up cardiovascular care in rural Minnesota

    [ad_1]

    When someone’s heart suddenly stops, every second matters. A new M Health Fairview program is giving rural Minnesotans a better chance at survival by flying in lifesaving equipment and specialists when time is running out.

    For years, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, or ECMO, has been available only in major Twin Cities hospitals. It’s a machine that temporarily takes over the work of the heart and lungs, keeping oxygen flowing through the body after a cardiac arrest.

    “For the last decade within the Twin Cities metro area, we’ve been providing ECMO and ECPR for patients with cardiac arrest that does not respond to standard treatments,” said Dr. Jason Bartos, a cardiologist with M Health Fairview at the University of Minnesota Medical Center. “This is a pump that provides normal blood flow and takes over the function of the heart and lungs when their heart and lungs do not respond.”

    Now, that same advanced care can be delivered by helicopter to hospitals like M Health Fairview Lakes Medical Center in Wyoming, Minnesota.

    “Our goal with the helicopter-based program is to bring the expertise and the equipment to these sites further out from the Twin Cities so that we can provide this treatment to a larger population of people, more in the rural areas of Minnesota,” Bartos said.

    The treatment, known as ECPR when used during cardiac arrest, can drastically improve survival rates. In past studies across the Twin Cities, patients who received ECPR had survival rates around 43% compared to roughly 1% with standard therapy alone.

    “ECPR is extremely time dependent,” Bartos said. “Every minute we have, we lose almost 2.5% more people with every minute that passes by.”

    That urgency is what inspired M Health Fairview and Life Link III to create a mobile ECMO team capable of landing at rural emergency departments, starting the procedure, and then airlifting the patient back to the University of Minnesota Medical Center for recovery.

    At Fairview Lakes, emergency staff say the new program bridges a life-or-death gap.

    “Now that help comes to us, so we’re able to help people on the worst day of their life and bring that equipment to them,” nurse manager Liz Asanovich said.

    Dry runs and simulations are already underway to make sure hospital staff and flight crews are in sync when real calls come in.

    “They did reassure us that I didn’t need to know how to run their ECMO equipment,” Asanovich said. “I simply need to provide a venue so that they can bring their specialty and do the work.”

    M Health Fairview says more rural sites are expected to join the program in the months ahead, extending advanced heart and lung support to patients who might not otherwise survive the trip.

    [ad_2]

    Nick Lunemann

    Source link

  • ‘Freddy’s Law’ would require cardiac test for youth athletes

    [ad_1]

    BOSTON — Health insurers will foot the bill for cardiac tests for high school athletes if a new proposal is approved by lawmakers on Beacon Hill.

    The legislation mandates that athletes in grades 9-12 be screened for heart conditions with an electrocardiogram as part of their sports physical at the beginning of the 2026-27 school year.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAmsF3365 “uC655J’D {2H[” E96 3:== 😀 ?2>65 27E6C uC655J tDA:?2=[ 2 `fJ62C@=5 !623@5J ‘6E6C2?D |6>@C:2= w:89 $49@@= ;F?:@C H9@ 5:65 😕 $6AE6>36C 7C@> DF556? 42C5:24 2CC6DE 5FC:?8 HC6DE=:?8 AC24E:46]k^Am

    kAm$E2E6 #6A] %@> (2=D9[ s!623@5J[ @?6 @7 E96 3:==’D AC:>2CJ DA@?D@CD[ D2:5 E96 8@2= 😀 E@ :56?E:7J F?5:28?@D65 962CE 4@?5:E:@?D 367@C6 2 J@F?8 2E9=6E6 DF776CD 42C5:24 2CC6DE[ H9:49 <:==D E9@FD2?5D @7 J@F?8 A6@A=6 6249 J62C]k^Am

    kAm“x7 2D A2CE @7 2 C68F=2C A9JD:42= 6I2> E@ A=2J G2CD:EJ DA@CED[ DEF56?ED 925 2? tzv[ :E >:89E A:4< FA 2 962CE 56764E 2?5 2G@:5 AC@3=6>D 5@H? E96 C@25[” 96 D2:5]k^Am

    kAm(2=D9 D2:5 E96 AC@A@D2= DE6>D 7C@> 2 4@?G6CD2E:@? 96 925 H:E9 tDA:?2=’D 72>:=J 5FC:?8 2 C646?E 46C6>@?J 2E E96 6=6>6?E2CJ D49@@= uC655J 2EE6?565 E@ >2C< E96 :?DE2==2E:@? @7 2 36?49 H:E9 2 A=2BF6 362C:?8 9:D ?2>6] w6 D2:5 E96 72>:=J 6IAC6DD65 DFAA@CE 7@C 677@CED E@ AC6G6?E 7FEFC6 EC2865:6D]k^Am

    kAm“w:D >@E96C 76=E :7 96 925 925 2? tzv 96 H@F=5 AC@323=J DE:== 36 2=:G6 E@52J[” (2=D9 D2:5] “w6 H2D A=2J:?8 DA@CED 2?5 E96J 5:5?’E C62=:K6 E96C6 H2D 2? :DDF6 H:E9 9:D 962CE]”k^Am

    kAmt=64EC@42C5:@8C2>D 2C6 2 D:>A=6 E6DE E92E 42? 36 5@?6 😕 2 ?FCD6’D @C 5@4E@C’D @77:46] xE C64@C5D E96 24E:G:EJ @7 E96 962CE 3J >62DFC:?8 6=64EC:42= :>AF=D6D E9C@F89 D>2== 6=64EC@56 A2E496D 2EE24965 E@ E96 D<:? @7 E96 496DE[ 2C>D 2?5 =68D] %96 D4C66?:?8D 42? 42E49 :DDF6D DF49 2D :CC68F=2C 962CE362ED 2?5 @E96C 23?@C>2=:E:6D]k^Am

    kAm&?56C E96 AC@A@D2=[ E96 |2DD249FD6EED x?E6CD49@=2DE:4 pE9=6E:4 pDD@4:2E:@? H@F=5 36 C6BF:C65 E@ H@C< H:E9 E96 DE2E6 2?5 @E96C 8C@FAD E@ 56G6=@A A@=:4:6D 2?5 AC@465FC6D 7@C 4@?5F4E:?8 E96 6I2>:?2E:@?D[ :?4=F5:?8 H92E 92AA6?D H96? 2 E6DE C6G62=D 23?@C>2=:E:6D 2?5 H96E96C E96C6 D9@F=5 36 6I6>AE:@?D 7@C A2C6?ED E@ @AE @FE @7 E96 D4C66?:?8]k^Am

    kAm“%9:D 3:== 😀 C62==J :>A@CE2?E[” D2:5 DE2E6 $6?] y@2? {@G6=J[ s$2=6>[ 2?@E96C 4@DA@?D@C @7 E96 =68:D=2E:@?] “p =@E @7 E96D6 962=E9 :DDF6D 2C6 D:=6?E 2?5 @7E6? H6 5@?’E 7:?5 @FE 23@FE :E F?E:= E96C6’D 2 EC28:4 :?4:56?E[ 2D 😕 uC655J’D 42D6] %96D6 D4C66?:?8D 4@F=5 96=A AC6G6?E E92E]”k^Am

    kAmx7 2AAC@G65[ |2DD249FD6EED H@F=5 ;@:? u=@C:52 😕 D6EE:?8 2 C6BF:C6>6?E E92E DEF56?E 2E9=6E6D 36 E6DE65 367@C6 E96J 42? A=2J]k^Am

    kAmu=@C:52’D “$64@?5 r92?46” =2H[ D:8?65 3J v@G] #@? s6$2?E:D 62C=:6C E9:D J62C[ H2D ?2>65 😕 9@?@C @7 r92?46 v2:?6C[ 2 u=@C:52 9:89 D49@@= 7@@E32== A=2J6C H9@ 5:65 😕 a_ac 27E6C 4@==2AD:?8 5FC:?8 2 82>6] %96 =2H C6BF:C6D 9:89 D49@@= 2E9=6E6D E@ 86E 2E =62DE @?6 tzv 367@C6 E96J 42? A=2J G2CD:EJ 7@@E32== 2?5 @E96C DA@CED]k^Am

    kAmp? 6DE:>2E65 f[___ 49:=5C6? DF776C 42C5:24 2CC6DE 6249 J62C[ 244@C5:?8 E@ E96 p>6C:42? w62CE pDD@4:2E:@?] %9@FD2?5D @7 @E96CD 2C6 D2G65 3J 2FE@>2E65 6IE6C?2= 567:3C:==2E@CD[ H9:49 AC@G:56 2 D9@4< E@ C6G:G6 2 A6CD@? 😕 42C5:24 2CC6DE[ E96 2DD@4:2E:@? D2:5]k^Am

    kAm%96 |2DD249FD6EED AC@A@D2= DE:== 7246D 2 =@?8 D=@8 E9C@F89 E96 =68:D=2E:G6 AC@46DD 2?5 ?665D E@ 36 2AAC@G65 3J E96 w@FD6 @7 #6AC6D6?E2E:G6D 2?5 $6?2E6 367@C6 9625:?8 E@ v@G] |2FC2 w62=6J’D 56D< 7@C 4@?D:56C2E:@?] %96 {68:D=2EFC6 😀 2=>@DE 2E :ED 92=7H2J >2C< E9C@F89 E96 EH@J62C D6DD:@?]k^Am

    kAm%96 =2E67:=65 3:== 😀 2=D@ 724:?8 62C=J AFD9324< 7C@> E96 962=E9 :?DFC2?46 :?5FDECJ[ H9:49 @AA@D6D ?6H >2?52E6D @? >65:42= 4@G6C286]k^Am

    kAm“|2DD249FD6EED 2=C625J 92D @?6 @7 E96 >@DE 4@>AC696?D:G6 D6ED @7 C6BF:C65 36?67:ED 😕 E96 ?2E:@?[ 2?5 =2J6C:?8 @? ?6H >2?52E6D @?=J >2<6D 4@G6C286 =6DD 277@C523=6 2?5 5C:G6D >@C6 6>A=@J6CD @FE @7 E96 C68F=2E65 >2C<6E[” {@C2 !6==68C:?:[ AC6D:56?E 2?5 rt~ @7 E96 |2DD249FD6EED pDD@4:2E:@? @7 w62=E9 !=2?D[ D2:5 😕 2 DE2E6>6?E]k^Am

    kAm!6==68C:?: D2:5 962=E9 A=2?D 2C6 “4@>>:EE65 E@ 6?DFC:?8 E92E 2== C6D:56?ED 92G6 2446DD E@ 9:89BF2=:EJ[ 277@C523=6 42C6[” 3FE 6G6CJ >2?52E6 “255D E@ AC6>:F>D 7@C :?5:G:5F2=D 2?5 D>2== 3FD:?6DD6D 😕 E96 7F==J :?DFC65 >2C<6E]”k^Am

    kAm{2H>2<6CD 324<:?8 E96 3:==D D2:5 E96J 6IA64E65 E96 :?DFC2?46 C6BF:C6>6?E E@ C2:D6 AC@3=6>D 3FE 2C8F6 E92E E96 D4C66?:?8D H:== 96=A D2G6 =:G6D 2?5 C65F46 >65:42= 4@DED H:E9 2 D:>A=6 E6DE]k^Am

    kAm“(6 @H H6 92G6 2 =@?8 C@25 29625 @7 FD[ 3FE H6 E9@F89E E92E 2 =2E67:=6 3:== H2D E96 H2J E@ 8@ E@ 86E E96 H@C< DE2CE65[” (2=D9 D2:5] “%9:D 86ED E96 5:D4FDD:@? 8@:?8[ 2?5 9@A67F==J H6 42? 4@>6 FA H:E9 2 D@=FE:@?]”k^Am

    kAmr9C:DE:2? |] (256 4@G6CD E96 |2DD249FD6EED $E2E69@FD6 7@C }@CE9 @7 q@DE@? |65:2 vC@FAUCDBF@jD ?6HDA2A6CD 2?5 H63D:E6D] t>2:= 9:> 2E k2 9C67lQ>2:=E@i4H256o4?9:?6HD]4@>Qm4H256o4?9:?6HD]4@>k^2m]k^Am

    [ad_2]

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

    Source link

  • ‘Fight or flight takes over’: Transportation employees save cardiac arrest victim’s life

    [ad_1]

    A Vermont man is lucky to be alive after collapsing from cardiac arrest in August. This week, he finally got the chance to thank the people who saved him.Bob Fenoff, 67, was working on a wall in his office when he said he suddenly blacked out and collapsed. Fenoff’s office is connected to the garage, which he leases to the Vermont transportation agency, VTRANS. “I just lost consciousness and that was it. Ended up on the floor,” Fenoff said.Two VTRANS employees, Noah Royer and John McClure, immediately jumped into action. They dialed 911 and began performing CPR — skills they had learned through mandatory workplace training.“Even though it doesn’t train you for moments like that, it gives you the basics,” Royer said. “Fight or flight takes over from there.”First responders arrived minutes later. Paramedics used a defibrillator to restart Fenoff’s heart. He spent two weeks in a coma before waking up and is now expected to make a full recovery.“If it had not been for the brave and immediate actions of Noah Royer and John McClure, I do not think that Mr. Fenoff would be standing in front of us today,” Keith Feddersen, a paramedic with CALEX Ambulance, said.Fenoff and his wife, Kathy, say they can’t express enough gratitude for the lifesaving efforts.“I’d thank you a hundred times — can’t thank you enough,” Kathy said.First responders hope Fenoff’s story will inspire others to learn CPR and AED use.“Getting certified is vitally important,” Capt. Phil Hawthorne of the St. Johnsbury Fire Department said. “This case really proves it.”

    A Vermont man is lucky to be alive after collapsing from cardiac arrest in August. This week, he finally got the chance to thank the people who saved him.

    Bob Fenoff, 67, was working on a wall in his office when he said he suddenly blacked out and collapsed. Fenoff’s office is connected to the garage, which he leases to the Vermont transportation agency, VTRANS.

    “I just lost consciousness and that was it. Ended up on the floor,” Fenoff said.

    Two VTRANS employees, Noah Royer and John McClure, immediately jumped into action. They dialed 911 and began performing CPR — skills they had learned through mandatory workplace training.

    “Even though it doesn’t train you for moments like that, it gives you the basics,” Royer said. “Fight or flight takes over from there.”

    First responders arrived minutes later. Paramedics used a defibrillator to restart Fenoff’s heart. He spent two weeks in a coma before waking up and is now expected to make a full recovery.

    “If it had not been for the brave and immediate actions of Noah Royer and John McClure, I do not think that Mr. Fenoff would be standing in front of us today,” Keith Feddersen, a paramedic with CALEX Ambulance, said.

    Fenoff and his wife, Kathy, say they can’t express enough gratitude for the lifesaving efforts.

    “I’d thank you a hundred times — can’t thank you enough,” Kathy said.

    First responders hope Fenoff’s story will inspire others to learn CPR and AED use.

    “Getting certified is vitally important,” Capt. Phil Hawthorne of the St. Johnsbury Fire Department said. “This case really proves it.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Stillwater football player saved by AED after going into cardiac arrest

    Stillwater football player saved by AED after going into cardiac arrest

    [ad_1]

    STILLWATER, Minn. — The gridiron is where winners are crowned and incredible comebacks happen.

    Stillwater High School Sophomore Keegan Hawke has one great comeback story.

    On Sept. 24, Hawke went into cardiac arrest and collapsed during football practice.

    “All I remember is him saying ‘coach, coach,’ then he’s right in front of me on the ground,” said Assistant Coach Matt Hemenway.

    With no pulse and no time to spare, coaches and athletic trainers jumped into action with a critical piece of equipment and saved his life.

    Stillwater High School Athletic Trainers Olivia Dubois and Mike Renfro started CPR while preparing the Automated External Defibrillator (AED).

    “Knew he didn’t have a pulse, wasn’t breathing. We knew we needed the AED,” Dubois said. “It advised a shock. We pressed a button to administer a shock,” added Renfro.

    The AED did what it was supposed to, restarted Hawke’s heart as he was rushed to Regions Hospital.

    After days in the hospital, he was diagnosed with an uncommon heart rhythm that doctors hadn’t detected before when he went to get checked for an irregular heart beat.

    “When playing sports, my heart would go from normal to super-fast but it would go away,” Hawke said.

    After 72 hours in an induced coma and a total of 11 days in various hospitals—Keegan returned home Friday with a device that’ll monitor his heart and deliver a shock if and when he needs it.

    “Really grateful, very thankful for my teammates and coaches and trainers that helped me,” Keegan said.

    Katie Hawke credits the quick use of the AED for saving Hawke’s life.

    “We want to create awareness that this can really happen to anyone at any age,” Katie said.

    Hawke’s family is ready to champion for the miracles of that day and a lifetime with their son.

    “We want to make sure anyone who’s coaching sports, at grocery store, anywhere knows CPR and how to work an AED,” Katie said.

    An online fundraiser has raised nearly $5,000 for that goal.

    On Friday, Hawke was back on the field to thank the trainers that saved him and see the friends he missed dearly.

    Keegan is bummed he can’t play football anymore, but he’s still going to be on the sidelines for his Stillwater teammates.

    [ad_2]

    Ubah Ali

    Source link

  • Caffeine’s Dirty Little Secret

    Caffeine’s Dirty Little Secret

    [ad_1]

    On Tuesday, curiosity finally got the best of me. How potent could Panera’s Charged Lemonades really be? Within minutes of my first sip of the hyper-caffeinated drink in its strawberry-lemon-mint flavor, I understood why memes have likened it to an illicit drug. My vision sharpened; sweat slicked my palms.

    Laced with more caffeine than a typical energy drink, Panera’s Charged Lemonade has been implicated in two wrongful-death lawsuits since it was introduced in 2022. Though both customers who died had health issues that made them sensitive to caffeine, a third lawsuit this month alleges that the lemonade gave an otherwise healthy 27-year-old lasting heart problems. Following the second death, Panera denied that the drink was the cause, but in light of the lawsuits it has added warnings about the drink, reduced its caffeine content, and removed the option for customers to serve themselves.

    All the attention on Panera’s Charged Lemonade has resurfaced an age-old question: How much caffeine is too much? You won’t find a simple answer anywhere. Caffeine consumption is widely considered to be beneficial because it mostly is—boosting alertness, productivity, and even mood. But there is a point when guzzling caffeine tips over into uncomfortable, possibly unhealthy territory. The problem is that defining this point in discrete terms is virtually impossible. In the era of extreme caffeine, this is a dangerous way to live.

    Most people don’t have to worry about dying after drinking Charged Lemonade. The effects, though uncomfortable, usually seem to be minor. After drinking half of mine, I was so wired that I couldn’t make sense of the thoughts ricocheting around my brain for the next few hours. Caffeine routinely leads to jitteriness, nervousness, sweating, insomnia, and rapid heartbeat. If mild, such symptoms can be well worth the benefits.

    But consuming too much caffeine can have serious health impacts. High doses—more than 1,000 milligrams a day—can result in a state of intoxication known as caffeinism. The symptoms can be severe: People can “develop seizures and life-threatening irregularities of the heartbeat,” and some die, David Juurlink, a toxicology professor at the University of Toronto who also works at the Ontario Poison Centre, told me. “It’s one of the dirty little secrets, I’m afraid, of caffeine.” Juurlink said he occasionally gets calls about people, typically high-school or college students, who have ingested multiple caffeine pills on a dare or in a suicide attempt.

    You’re unlikely to ingest that much caffeine from beverages alone, yet the increasing availability of highly caffeinated products makes it more of a possibility than ever before. Besides Panera’s Charged Lemonade, dozens of energy drinks contain similar amounts of caffeine, and some come in candy-inspired flavors such as Bubblicious and Sour Patch Kids. Less potent but highly snackable products include caffeinated coffee cubes, energy chews, marshmallows, mints, ice pops, and even vapes. Consumed quickly and in rapid succession, these foods can lead to potentially toxic caffeine intake “because your body hasn’t had time to tell you to stop,” Jennifer Temple, a professor at the University of Buffalo who studies caffeine use, told me.

    More than ever, we need a way to track our caffeine consumption, but we don’t seem to have any good options. In all of the lawsuits against Panera, the basic argument is this: Had the company more adequately warned customers of the drink’s caffeine content, perhaps no one would have been hurt. But most of us just aren’t used to thinking about caffeine in numerical terms the way we do with calories and alcohol by volume (ABV). Caffeine intake is generally something that’s not measured but experienced: I know, for example, that a double espresso from the office coffee machine will give me the shakes. But even though I knew how much caffeine is in a Charged Lemonade, I had no idea how much of it I could drink before having the same reaction.

    The FDA does have a recommended daily caffeine limit of 400 milligrams, the equivalent of about four or five cups of coffee. “Based on the relevant science and information available,” a spokesperson told me, consuming that much each day “does not raise safety concerns” for most adults, except for people who are pregnant or nursing, or have concerns related to their health conditions or the medication they take. The agency, however, doesn’t require food labels to note caffeine content, though some companies include that information voluntarily.

    But the numbers are helpful only up to a point. The FDA’s daily recommendation is a “rough guideline” that can’t be used as a universal standard, because “it’s not safe for everybody,” Temple said. For one person, 237 milligrams could mean a trip to the hospital; for another, that would just be breakfast. The effect of a given caffeine dose “varies tremendously from person to person based upon their historical pattern of use and also their genetics,” Juurlink told me.

    Although people generally aren’t aware of the amounts of caffeine they consume, they tend to develop a good sense of how much they can handle, Temple said. But usually, this knowledge is product-specific; when trying a new caffeine product, the effect can be hard to predict. Part of the problem is that the amount of caffeine in products varies dramatically, even among drinks that may seem similar: A 12-ounce Americano from McDonald’s contains 71 milligrams of caffeine, but the same drink at Starbucks contains 150 milligrams. The caffeine in popular energy drinks ranges from 75 milligrams (Ocean Spray Cran-Energy) to 316 milligrams (Redline Xtreme), according to the Center for Science in the Public Interest.

    Contrast this with alcohol, which tends to be served in conventional units regardless of brand: a can of beer, a glass of wine, or a shot of liquor, all of which have roughly the same ability to intoxicate. Having a standard unit to gauge consumption isn’t foolproof—consuming too much alcohol is still far too easy—but it is nevertheless helpful for thinking about how much you’re ingesting, as well as the differences between beverages. Without such a metric for caffeine, consuming new beverages takes on a daredevil quality. Sipping the Charged Lemonade felt like venturing into the Wild West of caffeine.

    The reason we aren’t good at thinking about caffeine is that historically, we’ve never really had to think that hard about it. Sure, one too many espressos might have occasionally put someone over the edge, but caffeine was consumed and sold in amounts that didn’t require as much thought or caution. “A generation ago, you didn’t have all these energy drinks,” so people didn’t grow up learning about safe caffeine consumption the way they may have done for alcohol, Darin Detwiler, an food-policy expert at Northeastern University, told me.

    Compounding the concern is the fact that energy drinks are popular with kids, who are more susceptible to caffeine’s effects because they’re smaller. Kids tend to drink even more when drinks are labeled as highly caffeinated, Temple said, and the fact that they contain huge amounts of sugar to mask the bitter taste of caffeine adds to their appeal. Last year, a child reportedly went into cardiac arrest after drinking a can of Prime Energy—prompting Senator Chuck Schumer to call on the FDA to investigate its “eye-popping caffeine content.”

    Nothing else in our daily diet is quite like caffeine. Certainly people swear by it, and its benefits are clear: Research shows that it can improve cognitive performance, speed up reaction time, and boost logical reasoning, and it may even reduce the risk of Parkinson’s, diabetes, liver disease, and cancer. But for a substance so ubiquitous that it’s called the most widely used drug in the world, our grasp of how to maximize its benefits is feeble at best. Even the most seasoned coffee drinkers sometimes unintentionally get too wired; as new, more highly caffeinated products become available, instances of caffeine drinkers overdoing it will probably become more common. Perhaps the best we can do is learn how much of each drink we can handle, one super-charged sip at a time.

    [ad_2]

    Yasmin Tayag

    Source link

  • Young nurse practicing cardiac arrest treatment goes into cardiac arrest

    Young nurse practicing cardiac arrest treatment goes into cardiac arrest

    [ad_1]

    Concord, N.H. — Andy Hoang eagerly began her first nursing job this year in New Hampshire, with a desire to specialize in cardiac care.

    She was excited about attending a November practice session on how to respond to someone in cardiac arrest. But as things were getting under way at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Hoang, 23, started to feel dizzy and nauseous. She felt she needed to sit down.

    “That’s the last thing I remember,” she told The Associated Press in an interview. “I woke up to a room full of doctors and nurses.”

    Nurse Cardiac Arrest New Hampshire
    Andy Hoang, 23, a recent nursing graduate, center, poses on Dec. 5, 2023, in Lebanon, N.H. with co-workers Lisa Davenport, left, and Justina Terino at the spot where she was stricken the month before during a cardiac training session at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.

    Charles Krupa / AP


    It turned out that she, herself, had gone into cardiac arrest and needed help immediately. Her colleagues sprang into action – instead of practicing chest compressions on a mannequin in a simulated environment, they went to work on her.

    “One checked her carotid, one her femoral (arteries), and she did not have a pulse,” instructor Lisa Davenport said.

    The nurses started CPR and a “code blue,” or medical emergency, team was called.

    A first  

    “What was really stressful about the situation was that we never had a real code blue in the center,” Davenport said. “We train for them all the time.”

    Davenport shouted for help. Luckily, the Lebanon hospital’s critical care team was nearby, attending a separate session. More nurses came in, hooked Hoang up to defibrillator for monitoring, inserted an IV line and placed her on oxygen. A doctor and nurse from another department rushed in with crash carts.

    Hoang was waking up by the time an emergency team arrived. Davenport estimated 15 minutes passed from the time Hoang slumped over to when they got her on a stretcher and sent her to the emergency department. But it felt longer.

    “It worked out, but it was pretty frightening for all of us,” she said. “You just don’t expect that to happen with someone as young as Andy.”

    Charmaine Martin, one of the nurses at the scene, agreed it was a scary moment, but also one “where I saw and felt supported and we all worked as a team,” she said in a statement.

    Hoang, who recently returned to work, couldn’t believe what had happened either.

    “I would say I’m your pretty average healthy 23-year-old,” she said. She goes to the gym four times a week, runs, and eats well. “I’m on my feet 12, 13 hours a day at work, so I want to make sure that I’m in shape for that.”

    Cardiac arrest vs. heart attacks  

    Cardiac arrest – the sudden loss of heart function – causes more than 436,000 deaths in the United States each year, according to the American Heart Association. It is different from a heart attack, which happens when blood flow to the heart is blocked.

    A person can suffer cardiac arrest after having a heart attack, but the association says other conditions can also disrupt the heart’s rhythm and lead to cardiac arrest, including having a thickened heart muscle or cardiomyopathy, heart failure, arrhythmias and more.

    According to information compiled by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, a person’s risk of cardiac arrest increases with age. It is rare in someone younger than 30. Genetic arrhythmias, problems with the structure of the heart or coronary arteries, heart inflammation and substance abuse are the main risk factors in younger people. Most cardiac arrests also occur in men and women’s risk increases after menopause.

    Unlikely victim  

    Hoang said before the day she suffered cardiac arrest, she had passed out twice before. The first time, she hadn’t eaten and her blood sugar was low. The second time was preceded by a sharp pain in her abdomen.

    “So, nothing like this, nothing to this extent,” she said.

    Hoang, who grew up in Vietnam and came to the United States in 2016 as a student, said her family has no history of heart problems. She had been living with a family in Montana before she got her nursing degree in Michigan, then headed to New Hampshire.

    While recovering, Hoang wore a patch that recorded the electrical activity of her heart. Doctors hope to learn more from the data.

    The experience has strengthened her relationship with the other nurses – Hoang now regards them as best friends. “We basically went through this whole life-or-death experience,” she said.

    “I am so grateful for Andy and her courage. She is an excellent nurse and someone I call friend,” Martin said.

    Hoang said she feels like she’s part of a family at work, not just an employee. Her family told the AP they are extremely grateful that she was surrounded by medical personnel when she went into cardiac arrest.

    It was care given by nurses to her grandfather, who died a couple of years ago, that made Hoang want to switch her career focus from graphic design to nursing. But she never expected she would become a patient.

    “It really changed my perspective on how I view life, like ‘Hug your family a little longer,’” she said. “Tell them that you love them, because it might be the last time you get to say it to them. And just cherish life for what you’ve been given. It’s precious, and I didn’t realize how precious it was until I nearly lost it.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Matthew Perry Dead At 54 – Perez Hilton

    Matthew Perry Dead At 54 – Perez Hilton

    [ad_1]

    We cannot believe we’re reporting this right now…

    Matthew Perry has died at the age of 54, according to a shocking report from TMZ on Saturday.

    Law enforcement sources say the Friends star was found at his Los Angeles home, where first responders rushed to respond to a call of a cardiac arrest. Unfortunately it was too late. He was found in a jacuzzi — and it appears he died of drowning.

    Photos: Stars We Lost In 2023

    Sources tell the outlet there were no drugs on the scene, and there is no foul play suspected.

    Perry had apparently been playing pickleball for two hours earlier in the morning. While he was relaxing afterward he sent his assistant on some errands. When the assistant returned later in the morning, they found the actor unresponsive and called 911. A full investigation is being conducted.

    This is just devastating.

    After guest-starring in basically every hit TV show ever, Perry had a great film run being fantastically charming in movies like The Whole Nine Yards, Three To Tango, 17 Again, and Fools Rush In. But of course he will forever be known as the iconic Chandler Bing on Friends, the king of ’90s sarcasm. Here’s a taste of some of his most classic moments…

    We just can’t believe he’s gone…

    Perry was always the most troubled Friends star, dealing with severe addiction problems on and off. In recent years he’s been candid about just how bad it got, revealing some truly sad stories in interviews and his tell-all book Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing.

    But it seemed he had really turned a corner. We thought for sure we’d have decades more of his wit and charm, whether in front of the camera or not. So so sad…

    [Image via Warner Bros/YouTube.]

    [ad_2]

    Perez Hilton

    Source link

  • Buffalo Bills running back Damien Harris leaves field in ambulance after suffering neck injury in Giants game

    Buffalo Bills running back Damien Harris leaves field in ambulance after suffering neck injury in Giants game

    [ad_1]

    Buffalo Bills running back Damien Harris had to be taken off the field by ambulance after he suffered a neck injury during Sunday night’s home game against the New York Giants in Orchard Park.  

    With over three minutes to go in the second quarter, Harris sustained the injury during a third down play, when he was hit by Giants linebacker Bobby Okereke after taking a handoff.

    As the play ended, Harris stayed down on the ground, with players immediately signaling for medical staff to come out onto the field.

    Damien Harris
    Teammates look on as Damien Harris of the Buffalo Bills is loaded into an ambulance after suffering an injury in the second quarter against the New York Giants at Highmark Stadium on Oct. 15, 2023, in Orchard Park, New York.

    Timothy T Ludwig / Getty Images


    Harris appeared immobile for several minutes. Play was halted while he was placed on a stretcher and loaded into an ambulance. On the broadcast, he gave a thumbs up to the crowd before being placed in the ambulance.

    The game eventually resumed. The Bills later reported on social media that Harris had movement in his arms and legs. The team said was taken to a hospital for further testing.  

    The incident brought back memories of the cardiac arrest suffered by fellow Bills teammate Damar Hamlin on the field during a Monday Night Football game in January of last season against the Cincinnati Bengals.

    Hamlin, who still plays for the Bills, but was inactive for Sunday’s game, was shown sitting emotionally on the sideline with his head in his hands as the situation unfolded.

    In the Jan. 2 game at Cincinnati, Hamlin collapsed after taking a blow to the chest while trying to make a tackle, causing his heart to stop. Medical staff performed CPR, restoring his heartbeat, before taking him to a hospital where he was treated for several days in critical condition. The game was canceled.

    Hamlin made a full recovery and returned to the field, playing in his first regular-season game since his cardiac arrest, on Oct. 1 against the Miami Dolphins. 

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Bronny James, son of LeBron James, released from hospital after suffering cardiac arrest

    Bronny James, son of LeBron James, released from hospital after suffering cardiac arrest

    [ad_1]

    Bronny James, son of LeBron James, released from hospital after suffering cardiac arrest – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Bronny James, the son of NBA superstar LeBron James, is recovering at home after he was released from a Los Angeles hospital Thursday, where he was being treated after suffering a cardiac arrest Monday during a basketball practice at USC.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Bronny James, LeBron James’ son, suffers cardiac arrest during practice

    Bronny James, LeBron James’ son, suffers cardiac arrest during practice

    [ad_1]

    Bronny James, LeBron James’ son, suffers cardiac arrest during practice – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Bronny James, the son of NBA star LeBron James, went into cardiac arrest while practicing at USC. He was in stable condition and out of the ICU as of Tuesday. Jonathan Vigliotti reports.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • CBS Evening News, April 18, 2023

    CBS Evening News, April 18, 2023

    [ad_1]

    CBS Evening News, April 18, 2023 – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Fox News and Dominion Voting Systems reach last minute settlement; Toddler breaches White House perimeter

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Eye on America: Cardiac arrest in young athletes, raising a multicultural family, and more

    Eye on America: Cardiac arrest in young athletes, raising a multicultural family, and more

    [ad_1]

    Eye on America: Cardiac arrest in young athletes, raising a multicultural family, and more – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Following the on-field collapse of Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin, we find out what parents should know about cardiac arrest in young athletes. We also sit down at the dinner table for food and conversation about raising a multicultural family. Watch these stories and more on Eye on America with Michelle Miller.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Medical experts demonstrate life-saving techniques when someone goes into cardiac arrest

    Medical experts demonstrate life-saving techniques when someone goes into cardiac arrest

    [ad_1]

    Medical experts demonstrate life-saving techniques when someone goes into cardiac arrest – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook and critical care specialist at NYU Langone Dr. Deepak Pradhan join “CBS Mornings” to demonstrate life-saving techniques when a person goes into cardiac arrest.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Damar Hamlin releases public video for the first time since his on-field collapse

    Damar Hamlin releases public video for the first time since his on-field collapse

    [ad_1]

    Damar Hamlin, the Buffalo Bills safety who collapsed on field earlier this month, thanked his fans and the medical professionals responsible for his recovery in his first public video since suffering the cardiac arrest that left him in critical condition.

    “I can’t tell you how appreciative I am for all the love, all the support,” Hamlin said in the video, which he posted on Saturday. 

    The official Twitter account for the team posted the heartwarming video with the caption, “A special message from our guy,” and the hashtags #LoveForDamar and #ForDamar. The video was also shared on Hamlin’s Instagram

    In the nearly six-minute long video, Hamlin starts by saying that it was important for him to “wait and speak publicly at the right time,” and goes on to thank his team, his family and friends, the medical professionals who “saved [his] life,” and his fans, the “Bills Mafia,” among others.

    “It’s just been a lot to process,” Hamlin said. 

    Following a hit in an away game against the Cincinnati Bengals on Jan. 2 that resulted in cardiac arrest, Hamlin’s heartbeat was restored on-field before he was transferred to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center. He remained there for nine days before returning to Buffalo for further medical treatment.

    “What happened to me on ‘Monday Night Football,’ I feel, is a direct example of God using me as a vessel to share my passion and my love directly from my heart with the entire world,” he said, sporting a t-shirt with the name of his charitable foundation, “Chasing Millions.”

    “And now I’m able to give to kids and communities all across the world who need it the most. And that’s always been my dream,” he added. “That’s always been what I stood for and what I will continue to stand for.”

    Seattle Seahawks fans hold signs in honor of Damar Hamlin #3 of the Buffalo Bills prior to the game against the Los Angeles Rams at Lumen Field on January 8, 2023 in Seattle, Washington.

    Steph Chambers / Getty Images


    A GoFundMe page for the Chasing M’s Foundation by Hamlin and his team has raised over $9 million in charitable donations from nearly 250,000 donors — and “received renewed support” after Hamlin’s hospitalization, read an update on the fundraising profile. 

    “Damar created The Chasing M’s Foundation to use as a vehicle to bring lasting impact to his community,” GoFundMe page says. “The foundation supports toy drives, back-to-school drives, kids camps, and more. We’re hopeful about Damar’s future involvement in disbursing the incredibly generous contributions.”

    “Thank you to anyone who donated — in any type of way — to the Chasing M’s Foundation,” Hamlin said in the video. “I don’t even have the words to express the gratitude.” 

    Hamlin declined to provide more specifics on the current state of his health in the video, instead saying, “This is just the beginning of the impact I wanted to have on the world.” 

    “And with God’s guidance, I can do wonderful and great things,” he added. 

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Lisa Marie Presley, Elvis’ daughter, dies at 54

    Lisa Marie Presley, Elvis’ daughter, dies at 54

    [ad_1]

    Lisa Marie Presley, Elvis’ daughter, dies at 54 – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Lisa Marie Presley died Thursday at a Los Angeles hospital after suffering a cardiac arrest. She will be buried at Graceland, the Memphis home of her legendary father Elvis Presley. Elise Preston takes a look back on her life.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Lisa Marie Presley, daughter of Elvis Presley, dies at 54

    Lisa Marie Presley, daughter of Elvis Presley, dies at 54

    [ad_1]

    Lisa Marie Presley, the only child of Elvis and Priscilla Presley, has died Thursday at the age of 54. 

    A representative for Priscilla Presley confirmed her daughter’s death to CBS News. 

    “Priscilla Presley and the Presley family are shocked and devastated by the tragic death of their beloved Lisa Marie,” a publicist for Priscilla Presley told CBS News in a statement. “They are profoundly grateful for the support, love and prayers of everyone, and ask for privacy during this very difficult time.”  

    The announcement of Presley’s death came just hours after she was rushed to a hospital after experiencing cardiac arrest at her home in Calabasas, California. 

    “My beloved daughter Lisa Marie was rushed to the hospital. She is now receiving the best care,” Prisilla Presley wrote on Facebook earlier Thursday. “Please keep her and our family in your prayers. We feel the prayers from around the world, and ask for privacy during this time.”

    14th Annual Americana Music Festival & Conference - Festival - Day 3
    Lisa Marie Presley performs at 3rd & Lindsley during the 14th Annual Americana Music Festival & Conference – Festival – Day 3 on September 20, 2013 in Nashville, United States.

    Rick Diamond


    Like her late father, Presley was a singer-songwriter, releasing three albums between 2003 and 2012.

    Presley was married four times. She and her first husband, Danny Keough, had two children: daughter Riley —  an actress who has appeared in films such as “Mad Max: Fury Road” and “Logan Lucky” — and son Benjamin, who died by suicide in 2020. Keough and Presley divorced in 1994 after five and a half years of marriage. Presley married Michael Jackson three weeks later, but the couple divorced in 1996. 

    Presley next married actor Nicolas Cage in August 2002. The pair soon filed for divorce in November 2002, but the separation was not finalized until 2004. 

    In 2006, she married Michael Lockwood, her music producer. With Lockwood, Presley welcomed two more children, twins Harper Vivienne and Finley Aaron. In 2016, Presley filed for divorce. The divorce was finalized in 2021. 

    Family at Home
    Lisa Marie Presley, Priscilla Presley and Elvis Presley

    Magma Agency


    She was most recently seen in public at Tuesday’s Golden Globe Awards, where she and Priscilla Presley watched Austin Butler take home the best actor award for his star turn as Elvis in Baz Luhrmann’s 2022 biopic. 

    Speaking to “Entertainment Tonight” on the red carpet Tuesday, she called Butler’s performance “incredible” and “authentic.” 

    “I can’t even describe what it meant,” she said. 

    Lisa Marie Presley’s death came less than a week after what would have been Elvis Presley’s 88th birthday.

    [ad_2]

    Source link