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Dagsboro Woman Saves Her Husband’s Life with CPR

 

Paul Schaffran can be found at least two times a week playing 18 holes at Cripple Creek Golf and Country Club in Dagsboro where he lives.

At 67, Paul is a picture of health, looks healthy, still consults part time out of his home, and enjoys being with his wife Rita Schaffran, his family and his friends. It is hard to imagine that recently Paul collapsed in his home from a serious heart attack and lay unconscious and barely breathing on the kitchen floor. His wife Rita still vividly recalls the terrifying moments that occurred that morning.

Paul awakened at 4:45 a.m. with some pain in his chest. Since he considered himself healthy and had never exhibited any risks for heart disease, he didn’t expect a heart attack. As a matter of fact, he had always had a good bill of health at his annual physicals.

That morning he told Rita that he didn’t feel well and they both got up and got dressed. Paul, feeling his symptoms worsening, asked Rita to take him to a walk-in care facility. Instead, she called 911. While the 911 operator was still on the telephone, Paul collapsed onto the floor, unconscious. The 911 operator could hear what was going on and told Rita to begin cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) immediately.

 

Knowing CPR

“I had learned CPR years ago when my daughter was in Girl Scouts,” recalls Rita, who still can’t believe how calm she was as she tried to revive her husband. She quickly started the rhythmic, forceful pumping of CPR on Paul’s chest, and continued without stopping for 15 minutes. A paramedic with Sussex County Emergency Medical Services, an ambulance with the Millville Volunteer Fire Company and the state police came to her rescue and Paul was rushed to Beebe Healthcare’s emergency department in Lewes.

Paul’s condition was grim. He was taken to the Cardiac Cath Lab where an angiogram showed blockages in multiple vessels. Interventional cardiologist Ehtasham Qureshi, MD, performed a balloon angioplasty and inserted a special device called an intra-aortic balloon pump that helped rest his heart.

Beebe’s multidisciplinary team that also included emergency personnel, pulmonologist Ercilia Arias, MD, and critical care professionals in the Intensive Care Unit worked to stabilize him until he could have heart surgery on December 21. Paul was able to go home three days after surgery.

“His wife saved his life with CPR,” Beebe cardiac surgeon M.L. Ray Kuretu, MD, said after he operated on Paul to repair his damaged heart. He performed a coronary artery bypass graft procedure, creating two new coronary arteries for Paul’s heart.

“Ninety percent of heart attacks happen in the home,” said Dr. Kuretu. “CPR at the critical point is more important than what we do later to save the person’s life. And, calling 911 triples the chances of someone surviving a heart attack.”

Looking back, Paul says he knows that his wife saved his life as she performed CPR, and he also knows that the care at Beebe also saved his life.

“I am thankful I am still here,” he says.

 

Still Here

Following the surgery and under the watch of his cardiologist Rajinder Prasad, MD, Paul recuperated and participated in the Cardiac Rehabilitation program at Beebe.

“It’s gets you going,” he said of the rehabilitation program.

After the word of Paul’s experience spread around Cripple Creek Golf and Country Club, many residents wanted to learn CPR. The Millville Volunteer Fire Company came to the development three different times to gives classes.

“Knowing CPR is very important,” Dr. Kuretu says, adding that “It is especially important for seniors to know CPR because chances are, they will be the ones who are nearby when someone has a heart attack, especially in the neighborhoods in southern Delaware where so many of the residents are retirees.”

Statistically, more heart attacks occur in people over the age of 65.

Beebe Healthcare offers free CPR classes for consumers. While the class is free, a reservation is required. Each class will last about two hours. For more information or to reserve your spot, please call (302) 645-3248 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday to Friday.

 

For more information on heart health or if you need a cardiologist, call Carrie Snyder, Nurse Navigator, at (844) 316-3334, or email [email protected].