Heart Starter

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Heart Starter 3,8/5 6605 reviews

Published 1:44 PM EDT May 7, 2014Renee Myers was at her Jennings home when her husband Keith, 59, said he was dizzy. Keith sat on the edge of the bed and fell back, his face already blue.Renee, a nurse for 35 years, knew the signs. Her husband had had a heart attack. She started CPR immediately. Keith was unresponsive.'

He just said, 'I'm dizzy,' and he was gone,' she said Saturday during the 14th annual Be A Heartstarter program at the Cajundome. 'When I left the room (to call 911) I was planning his funeral.' 'It's a miracle I'm here,' Keith said Saturday.His cardiologist told the family if Renee had not started CPR immediately, Keith would not be alive today.About 1,200 people attended two bystander CPR classes offered for free Saturday through the 14th annual Be A Heartstarter program. Xtype plus. Since the start of the program, more than 16,000 people have been trained in CPR, Dr. Chuck Wyatt, a cardiologist and founder of the event, said.' Fourteen years ago, in your town and mine, your chance of surviving sudden cardiac arrest was one in 100,' Wyatt said.

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Now it's 32 in 100 thanks in part to CPR training.Beau Williford, 64, of Lafayette, was home alone at 2 a.m. His son, Alex, woke him up when he returned from a date.' He said I came out of the bedroom and asked him to Google heart attack. I felt like I was hit in the chest with a sledge hammer,' Beau Williford said.He took an aspirin and felt better so he told his son not to bother.

Alex started to take a shower but realized he wouldn't hear if his father needed him. When he checked on his dad, he was turning blue.Alex, 19 years old, did not know CPR. But someone at the end of the telephone when he dialed 911 did and talked him through it until paramedics arrived. He broke two of his dad's ribs, but he survived.Eighty-nine percent of people who suffer cardiac arrest — a heart attack — die because they don't get CPR within four minutes of collapsing, said Jennifer Morrow, a Be A Heartstarter volunteer and director of the Lafayette High Academy of Health Careers.Whether a bystander administers mouth-to-mouth resuscitation or not, CPR — compressions to the chest — is the most important thing to do, Morrow said.

Compressions force blood to circulate, especially to the brain and heart, carrying vital oxygen and other nutrients, she said.To apply chest compressions, trace the victim's nipples to the center of their chest. Apply the heel of your hand on that spot with your other hand on top. Link your fingers and lift the fingers off the person. Forcefully press down with stiff arms onto the center of the chest, at least two inches deep. Count out loud, applying 100 compressions per minute. Have someone call 911 or call yourself, quickly, then start CPR again.Every school in Lafayette Parish is supposed to have an automated external defibrillator, another gift of the Heartstarter program, Wyatt said.Lafayette High School received its AED in May 2008.

Less than two years later, it saved a life.Kenneth Henry of Church Point was officiating a football game at Lafayette High on Nov. He asked a trainer for a glass of water and collapsed.An Acadian Ambulance unit that usually was on standby at the game had left on another emergency call, but Morrow was in the stands. She and her students conducted CPR and used a defibrillator on Henry twice. We were like, 'oh my God! He's moving,' Morrow said Saturday.

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