*Mike, wow, I’m beyond words. Thank you for sending this to me. This story needs to be shared everywhere, and with that being said, I’m sharing this with family, friends, colleagues and everyone I know. I’m thankful for all of the people that played a part in your survival and I’m glad you are here today existing in this timeline with us to share your story. Let’s grab lunch again soon. Have a great week my friend!*
Mike is my brother and I couldn't be prouder of him for putting together and delivering this powerful and important message about sudden cardiac arrest. I am so glad that you not only survived your sudden cardiac arrest but are living to save others from death from sudden cardiac arrest with presentations like this. Excellent job!!
I like how the 911 call taker works to pull their focus away from "send a ambulance" and 'hurry" and "send help" and put them to work doing compressions. She saved the survivor's life.
So glad you survived this Mike- and that you're doing well today! Thank you for sharing your detailed and terrifying experience. It's very likely this will save lives!
Mike, I had a similar experience - I was 29 in 2019, when I had my OHCA. I happened to leave my apartment and go to my building laundry room - and had a converstation with someone. Had I not done that, I would have died - my spouse was still asleep early that morning.
I'm not medically trained, but I would think that a person's heart could go into cardiac arrest in that situation. If they did, they would have medical staff right there to address the situation.
*Mike, wow, I’m beyond words. Thank you for sending this to me. This story needs to be shared everywhere, and with that being said, I’m sharing this with family, friends, colleagues and everyone I know. I’m thankful for all of the people that played a part in your survival and I’m glad you are here today existing in this timeline with us to share your story. Let’s grab lunch again soon. Have a great week my friend!*
Thanks Zechariah! And thanks for sharing.
Mike is my brother and I couldn't be prouder of him for putting together and delivering this powerful and important message about sudden cardiac arrest. I am so glad that you not only survived your sudden cardiac arrest but are living to save others from death from sudden cardiac arrest with presentations like this. Excellent job!!
I like how the 911 call taker works to pull their focus away from "send a ambulance" and 'hurry" and "send help" and put them to work doing compressions. She saved the survivor's life.
Yes. She played an integral part of saving my life.
So glad you survived this Mike- and that you're doing well today! Thank you for sharing your detailed and terrifying experience. It's very likely this will save lives!
Mike, I had a similar experience - I was 29 in 2019, when I had my OHCA. I happened to leave my apartment and go to my building laundry room - and had a converstation with someone. Had I not done that, I would have died - my spouse was still asleep early that morning.
So happy you survived. Enjoy each day.
Thanks for watching. Please don't forget to share with your family, friends, and coworkers.
Just listened to the 911 call and saved this to watch later in full, thanks for sharing Mike!!
Thank you for the kind words Sandy!
Very intense true story! Informative knowledge we all need to know. Great job, Mike!
Thanks for watching Gina.
only video i have watched without a fast forward
You can grab the red button on the time-line and pull it right. I don't know why there is no fast forward. Thanks for watching.
@@MikeBroderick50 i meant 2x playback speed
Can à person be in cardiac arrest while being sedated and Intubation?
I'm not medically trained, but I would think that a person's heart could go into cardiac arrest in that situation. If they did, they would have medical staff right there to address the situation.