it was cpr that saved cohen’s life nearly two years ago when by quirk of fate ilana bank, a montreal children’s hospital emergency-room physician, stumbled upon an unconscious cohen on the floor of an n.d.g. ice-cream parlour . for over seven minutes, bank did compressions and pounded his chest so vigorously that she broke a few of his ribs in the process. urgences-santé personnel were to take over for another five minutes and applied aed (defibrillator) pads on him.
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“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.”
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halpert points out that even if there are people on site at an emergency to call for help, it could take up to six minutes for first responders from the fire department and close to nine minutes for urgences-santé to arrive on the scene.
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