“now i want to be prepared to help family members and friends who, too, are susceptible to crises,” says cohen, back at work and having resumed his regular routine. “as dr. bank pointed out, you don’t have to be a doctor to properly administer cpr and save someone’s life. i owe the ones who saved me to learn.”
to that end, cohen visits jonathan halpert, founder of the cpr instructor’s network. he became a cpr instructor in 1988 while working as a swimming-pool lifeguard.
“all the lifeguards had to re-certify one year, so we hired an instructor. he came, put a mannequin on the floor and was very quick. so i said to myself i could do the same thing and make it interesting for students,” says halpert, a certified instructor with the heart & stroke foundation of quebec.
“some 30 years later, i’m still teaching cpr to everyone from lifeguards to medical students to doctors and nurses to the general public.”
halpert’s instructional course lasts over three hours, entailing everything from cpr to defibrillator application to myriad other life-saving techniques.
“lawrence’s story is a perfect example of just how important cpr training really is, because you never know when or where or to whom an emergency is going to happen,” says halpert, who used to work as a first-responder and paramedic. “there are so many different causes of sudden cardiac arrest, be it cardiac-related or choking, suffocation, drug reaction, drowning, electrocution or an athlete taking a freaky hit to the chest (
like the buffalo bills’ damar hamlin), but a basic cpr skill can take help take care of these life-threatening emergencies.”