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No sudden blow to the chest for this 8th grader...its a terrible comotio cordis season

KFsdisciple

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Jul 3, 2003
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here we go again.

An eighth grader went into cardiac arrest at a basketball game — then a trainer rushed in to help, a South Carolina school said. The trainer, Chris Young, spent about 10 minutes performing CPR on middle school student Kamari Williams as the two waited for first responders, according to Southside Christian School. “Kamari spent the night in the hospital and is receiving treatment,” the Greenville-area school wrote Feb. 1 in a Facebook post. “We are praising God for his life and the staff involved in the emergency.”

Kamari was playing basketball on Jan. 31 when he bumped into another player and then suffered cardiac arrest and a seizure, WHNS and WYFF reported. LaTonya Perry, the boy’s mother, told WYFF the medical incident reminded her of the situation involving Damar Hamlin, a Buffalo Bills player who was put on oxygen after he went into cardiac arrest during a football game. “By them working so fast, my son didn’t have any of that,” Perry told the TV station. “He wasn’t on any oxygen. He wasn’t on any breathing machine, his vitals are good.”

Cardiac arrest, which “occurs when the heart suddenly and unexpectedly stops pumping,” can be deadly if a person doesn’t immediately receive medical help, experts say. A common cause is arrhythmia, also called irregular heartbeat, according to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. Officials said Kamari went into cardiac arrest during a junior varsity game at Brashier Middle College in Simpsonville, roughly 15 miles southeast of downtown Greenville. He attends nearby Southside Christian School, which offers pre-K to 12th grade classes. The school didn’t immediately share additional information with McClatchy News on Feb. 2.

Read more at: https://www.mahoningmatters.com/news/nation-world/article272019417.html#storylink=cpy
 
Pretty sure this used to be more rare than the rare safe and legal abortions we used to hear so much about.
Do you think it just seems more common because people are posting about it more on social media and no one is ever posting about how they aren't collapsing on social media?
 
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true, but I've played, watched, covered, and officiated sports, and it wasn't until a certain experiment came along have I ever seen young healthy kids catching heart attacks on the regular.

Meanwhile....Sweden has a higher percentage of its 12-17 yr olds vaccinated than just about anywhere...

And they don't seem to be having any problems, aside from some of the lowest mortality rates of anyplace.
 
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Meanwhile....Sweden has a higher percentage of its 12-17 yr olds vaccinated than just about anywhere...

And they don't seem to be having any problems, aside from some of the lowest mortality rates of anyplace.
oh now we remember what a Sweden is? we forgot about them during the pandemic.
 
oh now we remember what a Sweden is? we forgot about them during the pandemic.

No; we did not "forget about them" and their failed early response during the pandemic.
Their own leadership (and King) called them out on that, and the completely reversed direction.

And because of those dire early numbers, their population was highly motivated to get vaccinated. Which is why they are ~90% vaccinated, across almost all age-demographics.
 
What makes this more amusing or perhaps even more disappointing depending on your outlook is that if we take the OP at his word, he would otherwise be considered a reasonably intelligent and mid/high achieving person. I don't recall the details, but he's posted to the effect that he had a successful military career, academic success in a demanding major and a career with a defense contractor.

You know, not exactly the stereotype of the new MAGA brand GOP or Qanon type. Yet, here we are, probably tens of thousands of similar people out there.

My guess is years of conspiratorial conditioning has resulted in what he likely believes to be a free thinker, who does their own research, who doesn't swallow the narratives that "they" want you to believe, etc.

So on one hand, it's quite amusing, on the other hand, it's sad and even more so when you consider that it's not an isolated case.
 
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The story is tragic, and was likely avoidable.
How was it likely avoidable? The one thing that might have made it avoidable was if he'd been diagnosed with a propensity for cardiac arrest. That only occurs if a young person has an ekg and/or echo in lieu of any symptoms. Several years ago I spent a few days at local high schools performing EKG's on apparently healthy kids. Dozens of kids were identified as at risk and referred to cardiologists for follow up diagnostics and care. There is no age that is immune to sudden death from cardiac arrest.

You should spend less time pontificating and more time educating yourself and others.

 
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