TO JOIN STILL HERE BASKETBALL OR HAVE QUESTIONS ANSWERED, E-MAIL US AT: stillherebasketball@gmail.com

Post Office Box 92, Chippewa Lake, Ohio 44215-0092

Friday, January 27, 2012

STILL HERE VETERAN STOPS TICKING BUT KEEPS KICKING ---- SLOWEST BASKETBALL PLAYER IN AKRON OUTRUNS DEATH --- BASKETBALL PLAYER WITH NO VERTICAL LEAP RISES FROM THE DEAD --- (THE HEADLINES ARE ENDLESS)!

  










[SEE VIDEO:]

http://www.wkyc.com/news/article/226875/3/Akron-AED-brings-two-strangers-together

AKRON --  It's a reunion that may have never happened. 
"I was just looking at him and it seemed like he just took his last breath and it was like, uhhhh."
Deanna "Dee" Norflee, never thought she would have to use an Automatic External Defibrillator or an A-E-D.  She got training in March on the machine and in November she had to use it.
"I came into the gym and I saw him kneeling over right here in this exact spot," she says. 
Bart Skinner, 55, was just playing basketball on the same hard wood floors LeBron James did when he lived in Akron.
"My buddy's girlfriend looked at me and said, 'Bart you don't look too good,' and she said I told her I don't feel good and that's about all I remember."
A call to 9-1-1 and the decision to grab the A-E-D saved Skinner's life.
"When it said press the button we are ready to go," said Norflee.
Bart was out for three minutes before being treated by the AED.
E-M-S arrived in minutes and took over the situation.
Bart is alive, and well and thankful for AED's
"I think there a blessing and I'm glad for them and I'm glad I have training on them," says Skinner.
Training that may save another life in the future.
WKYC-TV


[SEE NEWS ARTCLE:]

http://www.ohio.com/news/akron-woman-s-use-of-aed-to-save-man-s-life-illustrates-value-of-devices-1.256665


Akron woman’s use of AED 
to save man’s life illustrates value of devices

By Stephanie Warsmith 
Beacon Journal staff writer
Published: January 24, 2012 - 12:00 AM

Deanna "Dee" Norflee (left) with the AED device she used to save the life of Bark Skinner at the Summit Lake Community Center recently. 




She normally prays silently.
Deanna “Dee” Norflee prayed aloud the day she saved Bart Skinner’s life.
“Please, Lord Jesus,” she said between sobs as she hooked an automatic external defibrillator (AED) unit to Skinner, who was in cardiac arrest. “Right now, if you give me the strength to do your will ...”
Norflee, a recreation director at Summit Lake Community Center in Akron, had just watched the 55-year-old Skinner take what could have been his last breath. Only seconds earlier, he had been sprinting up and down the basketball court.
“Press the button,” the AED unit told her.
Norflee did as instructed and felt like she was being shocked as she watched Skinner’s body jerk. He began to make a gurgling noise that meant he was breathing again.
Skinner, who was revived by paramedics a second time on the way to an area hospital but is now doing well, credits Norflee’s quick actions with saving his life. His basketball teammates honored Norflee with a plaque and fruit basket, and she will be recognized Thursday by Akron as the city’s Employee of the Month for January.
The incident, which occurred Nov. 29, is one of three in the past six months when someone used an AED in a city building.
An Akron fire captain used an AED on Tony Gorant, a retired Ohio Edison and Akron General Medical Center executive, during an Akron Planning Commission meeting July 8. Though Gorant was revived, he died a few weeks later.
Akron employees tried to use an AED on a city employee who was found Jan. 3 lying on the floor of the men’s locker room in the CitiCenter Athletic Club. The unit didn’t deliver a shock because the man didn’t have a shockable rhythm. It was too late for him to be revived.
“An AED is one of those things — a tool — that, under the right circumstances, with the right timing, can provide you with positive results,” Akron fire Capt. Dale Evans said. “Sometimes that’s not the case.”
Evans said Skinner was in good physical shape, his problem was recognized early, Norflee and others at the community center quickly provided him with help and he survived.
Efforts successful
Norflee remembers sitting in the community center office, feeling sorry for herself before she had to spring into action to help Skinner.
“I was sitting there complaining,” recalled Norflee, 32, who is also a substitute special education teacher for Akron Public Schools and an assistant boys varsity basketball coach at Buchtel High School. “There was so much going on.”
“Do you see that?” her co-worker suddenly asked.
Norflee looked into the gym and saw Skinner slouched over. She dialed 911 and told rescuers to hurry; they had a possible heart attack.
In the gymnasium, basketball players, spectators and people from the Narcotics Anonymous meeting in the adjoining room buzzed around, with everyone wanting to help.
One person said they needed to elevate Skinner’s legs. Someone said to grab a chair. Norflee told them they needed to lay Skinner flat.
A nurse who is the wife of one of the players started CPR. Norflee’s co-worker grabbed the AED and, together, they ripped open Skinner’s shirt. Norflee paused for a moment, perplexed because the AED wasn’t identical to the one she had been trained on. She then noticed an illustration inside that showed her what to do.
Skinner let out a noise, expelling his breath, and Norflee knew he was gone.
The AED, which had been reading Skinner’s rhythm, told her to push the button. Norflee told a man touching Skinner’s shoulder to back off and then pushed the button. It delivered an immediate shock that made Skinner jump.
“It felt like I was shocked,” Norflee said. “You go through the class, but it’s nothing like the real deal.”
Skinner made a gurgling sound that told Norflee he was breathing. He didn’t immediately come to, though, and his eyes rolled to the back of his head.
“Why isn’t it going off again?” someone asked.
When the paramedics rushed in, Norflee told them: “He was gone for about three. Then pressed. One shock,” an accounting she later realized didn’t quite make sense, but was enough to get the point across.
Norflee worried about Skinner until a firefighter who made a run to the community center about 45 minutes later because of a blown fuse told her he was in Akron General Medical Center’s emergency room, singing.
“Tears of joy came so fast,” she said. “It was a relief.”
Rescue aftermath
Skinner doesn’t remember singing in the emergency room.
In fact, he doesn’t remember much until he woke up in the ER with a sore chest and his sister, Celeste Hicks, at his side.
“I’m scared,” he told her.
She squeezed his hand and he felt better.
Doctors told Skinner he suffered a heart attack brought on by dehydration and a partially blocked artery. In the days that followed, they pumped him full of fluids, used a cardiac catheter on him and put in shunts and a pacemaker.
When Skinner celebrated his birthday Dec. 7, his friends told him he was 1 again. “You were gone and had a new birthday,” they said.
The experience has given both Skinner and Norflee a new outlook.
“My faith in the Lord is strong but not as strong as it should be,” Norflee said. “Complaining. Going on. How dare I complain!
“He showed me something through you,” Norflee said to Skinner, getting teary as they sat side by side at the community center where she saved him. “For me to embrace what I have, instead of wondering why things don’t go the way I want them to go.”
Skinner is thankful he had his heart attack in a place that had an AED and where someone was trained to use it. He has been trained to use the device because he volunteers at House of the Lord, his church, which has a fitness center. He now thinks AEDs should be available in more places.
“I think they should be everywhere,” he said.
AED campaign
Skinner isn’t alone in that opinion.
Terry Gordon, a retired Akron General doctor, has been leading a campaign for many years to make AEDs more available.
He was successful in getting AEDs added to all middle and high schools in Summit County, then in schools across the state, and in having them put in law-enforcement vehicles in Summit County. He has yet to achieve his goal of having them in every school across the country.
U.S. Rep. Betty Sutton, D-Copley Township, has introduced legislation three times that would provide federal funding for this addition. The legislation, which Sutton is shepherding in honor of Josh Miller, a Barberton High School football player who died of cardiac arrest during a game in 2000, made it through the House twice, only to be rejected in the Senate because of the expense.
“The travesty is: If you walk through the halls of Congress, there are AEDs everywhere — four or five on each floor,” Gordon said. “Our senators are protected, but not our children.”
Gordon said at least 192 children have died in schools since Sutton’s bill first made it through the House in 2008 — a number that he says could be higher because it’s an estimate compiled by a Parent Heart Watch.
Beyond schools, Gordon thinks AEDs should be in all high-rise buildings, golf courses, churches and shopping malls. He said they should be treated on par with smoke detectors and fire extinguishers.
Local governments aren’t required to have AEDs in their buildings, but many have them and are training employees in how to use them. Cuyahoga Falls, Stow, Green, Lake Township, New Franklin and Jackson Township have AEDs in municipal buildings, golf courses, pools, police stations and cruisers.
“They’re very simple to use and anyone who is trained how to use one can save a life,” Cuyahoga Falls fire Lt. Steve Lyons said.
Because of Akron’s three incidents in such a short time period, the city plans to re-examine its distribution of AEDs to determine whether more are needed and whether enough are available in the buildings that already have them. Akron has 34 AEDs in community centers, fitness centers, pools and other buildings used by employees or the public, including City Hall, CitiCenter and the police department.
“It’s a good time for us to evaluate the program,” Evans said. “We have little doubt of its value.”
Stephanie Warsmith can be reached at 330-996-3705 or swarsmith@thebeaconjournal.com. Beacon Journal staff writers Kathy Antoniotti and Paula Schleis and correspondent Gina Mace contributed to this report.