Otago Daily Times

Heartstopp­ing moment for young dad

- OSCAR FRANCIS oscar.francis@odt.co.nz

THE date February 13, 2021, is etched on Bradley Stratton’s mind.

That day, while playing with his then 3yearold son, Otis, out of the blue Mr Stratton collapsed.

Otis called out to his mother, Jessica, who performed CPR (cardiopulm­onary resuscitat­ion) on her husband until emergency service workers arrived and took over. Mr Stratton was 33 years old. He cannot remember anything from two days before the cardiac arrest until two or three days afterwards.

When he woke up, he thought he had been in a car accident because of the marks across his chest, which he thought had been caused by a seatbelt.

They were burns caused by the defibrilla­tor used to revive him.

His heart had gone into ventricula­r fibrillati­on and needed 10 shocks to restart a normal rhythm.

He was kept in the intensive care unit for several days.

When he woke up he was moved to the highdepend­ency unit, where he started his road to recovery.

Despite spending a lot of time in the cardiology ward undergoing tests, he still has no explanatio­n for what caused his cardiac arrest.

He said this week he was almost fully recovered, but there were still some reminders of how close he came to death.

His chest had been fitted with an internal defibrilla­tor, which monitored his heart rate, ready to deliver an electric shock if he had another cardiac arrest.

The brush with death had changed his perspectiv­e on life, he said.

The family had moved home from Auckland to Mosgiel, where both he and his wife grew up, for the slower pace of life and to have more family time.

If not for the rapid arrival of emergency services and his wife’s knowledge of CPR, he would have been a ‘‘goner’’, Mr Sutton said.

Ambulance officers and the fire crew who saved him had visited him during his recovery and said they could not believe he survived, Mr Stratton said.

He recognised he was one of the lucky ones.

A St John spokeswoma­n said between July 1, 2020, and June 30, 2021, more than 2000 people were treated by ambulance services for cardiac arrest events.

Only 25% of those made it to hospital alive.

St John clinical director Tony Smith said cardiac arrest was one of the leading causes of death in New Zealand, and survival rates had decreased slightly since 2020.

The decline was likely because of Covidrelat­ed disruption­s, and it was important to encourage awareness about the importance CPR and defibrilla­tion, because bystanders could save lives, Dr Smith said.

The three steps people needed to follow upon witnessing a cardiac arrest were to call for an ambulance, start CPR and use a defibrilla­tor, he said.

 ?? PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON ?? To the rescue . . . Mosgiel resident Bradley Stratton, pictured with wife Jessica and children Maisie (22 months) and Otis (5), credits Mrs Stratton’s knowledge of CPR with saving him after a cardiac arrest that emergency service workers were amazed he survived.
PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON To the rescue . . . Mosgiel resident Bradley Stratton, pictured with wife Jessica and children Maisie (22 months) and Otis (5), credits Mrs Stratton’s knowledge of CPR with saving him after a cardiac arrest that emergency service workers were amazed he survived.

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