Marlborough Express

First aid training saved wife’s life

- CECILE MEIER

When Aaron Sole found his wife Melissa unresponsi­ve and gasping for air while feeding their baby, he knew exactly what to do.

The Rolleston truck driver put their 6-month-old daughter, Sophie, away safely in her cot, called 111 and lifted his wife down to the floor.

For a split second, he wondered if she actually needed cardiopulm­onary resuscitat­ion (CPR) but the 111 operator told him she would fight him off if she did not need it.

He did compressio­ns to her chests for six minutes straight until a paramedic arrived with a defibrilla­tor.

Sophie was wide awake and calm in her cot. Her bottle was still warm – Melissa’s heart would have stopped shortly before Aaron came home about 10pm after a late shift.

The couple’s two other children, Annabell, 5, and Caleb, 8, were sleeping.

‘‘It was all just perfect timing,’’ Aaron said.

Aaron had been a Red Cross first responder volunteer for a few years and had done CPR training but never used it.

Melissa was 26, healthy and there were no warning signs.

Six weeks on from that night, she was fully recovered but the enormity of what happened had not ‘‘sunk in yet’’.

‘‘There’s no point dwelling on the could’ve been. I’d rather focus on life night now. I’m still here that’s what matters,’’ Melissa said.

The couple shared their story to raise awareness of the importance of CPR as part of Restart a Heart Day today..

‘‘Just do it [a first aid course],’’ Melissa said.

‘‘It’s only a few hours every two years to get a basic certificat­e and you never know when you might need it.

‘‘Cardiac arrest can happen to anyone. You don’t have to be old.’’

People should also find out where the defibrilla­tors were located in their neighbourh­ood, Aaron said. There was even an app for that.

St John intensive care paramedic Daniel Ohs was there on the night and said Aaron did everything right.

Ohs defibrilla­ted Melissa and her pulse came back.

‘‘That was thanks to the good CPR Aaron was doing,’’ he said.

Firefighte­rs arrived and helped get Melissa to the ambulance safely. She had no sustained brain damage from her cardiac arrest, Ohs said.

It was ‘‘very unusual’’ for such a young person to have a cardiac arrest with no apparent cause.

About 2000 New Zealanders suffer from cardiac arrest every year.

For every minute of cardiac arrest without CPR or defibrilla­tion a patient’s chance of survival falls by 10 to 15 per cent, Ohs said.

It takes a St John ambulance 7 minutes on average to arrive in urban areas and 11 minutes in rural areas.

Three out of 10 people who suffer cardiac arrest get a pulse back after that and 16 per cent survive to hospital discharge. A staggering 84 per cent die.

Jet boating fatality

A person died during a jet boating competitio­n on Canterbury’s Waimakarir­i River yesterday. The incident happened during the second day of the week-long 2017 World Championsh­ip Jetboat Marathon. Emergency services were called to the river, north of Christchur­ch, at 10.50am.

Patient missing

A Dunedin hospital will review the circumstan­ces around a patient’s disappeara­nce on Saturday as the search for the man continued yesterday. The search for Gordon Mclean, 63, is focused in an area around North Dunedin’s Kaikorai Valley. Mclean left Wakari Hospital about 3pm on Thursday, where he was a patient in its non-secure rehabilita­tion unit. Medical director Dr Brad Strong said the Southern District Health Board was ‘‘increasing­ly concerned’’ about Mclean’s wellbeing and would be reviewing how he came to leave the hospital.

Robbery on train

New Zealand actor Shane Cortese and his autistic son were badly shaken after a fun train ride in Auckland turned sour when they were robbed and intimidate­d. The actor said on social media that son Kees, 10, and he were on one of their regular train trips so Kees could make video logs on his iPad. ‘‘He sits a couple of seats in front of me and loves these trips.’’ During their trip two men and a woman got on the train and took the iPad and then exited the train at the next station. Auckland Transport spokespers­on Mark Hannan confirmed there had been an incident at about 10.30am on October 14. The trio were spotted on another train and were nabbed by police. Cortese said he was disappoint­ed he could not save his son from being upset. ‘‘I am just disappoint­ed that we have people in this country like that,’’ he said. Auckland Transport is aiming to employ more than 200 transport officers as part of a programme to increase passenger security and safety on trains and at rail stations.

About 2000 New Zealanders suffer a cardiac arrest every year. For every minute of cardiac arrest without CPR or defibrilla­tion a patient's chance of survival falls by 10 to 15 per cent. Three out of 10 people who suffer cardiac arrest get a pulse back after that and 16 per cent survive to hospital discharge.

 ?? PHOTO: JOSEPH JOHNSON/STUFF ?? Melissa Sole is thankful her husband, Aaron Sole, knew CPR and saved her life after she suffered a cardiac arrest while feeding 6-month-old Sophie.
PHOTO: JOSEPH JOHNSON/STUFF Melissa Sole is thankful her husband, Aaron Sole, knew CPR and saved her life after she suffered a cardiac arrest while feeding 6-month-old Sophie.

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