FAQ

Find answers to some of the more frequently asked questions on the Forums.

Forums guidelines

Our guidelines keep the Forums a safe place for people to share and learn information.

Near death resuscitate

Jensone
Community Member

In December 2024 i was visiting a friend and he collapsed in front of me,in my state of panic dialled 000 and was talked through into applying CPR for a total of 7 minutes…. i was on the phone line after checked my call log before a team of ambos arrived to continue to resuscitate.They worked on him for 40 minutes and unable to find a pulse and was given worse case scenario due to no heartbeat.

They ambos continued whilst transferring him to hospital 3 minutes away with me fearing the worst.

Arriving at emergency myself was told not to expect any miracles or his organs will shut down,brain damage etc etc after taking in the enormity of what had happened I’d braced myself that he was going to die.

Over  the course of the next week in a self induced coma he continued to improve and low and behold he regained consciousness and had a defibrillator fitted by day 13 and not long term side affects 

It continues to weigh on me that i actually helped saved his life and i have moments of what ifs and it seems surreal that he actually survived after i was told there was no hope 

just wondering if anyone else has had this happen and the after affects that one carries after witnessing the near death experience of losing someone 

9 Replies 9

white knight
Community Champion
Community Champion

Hi, welcome

 

Well done, yes you actually saved their life. It would leave you in either shock or traumatised and that is very normal unless you've done it before. I have twice, as a prison officer and as a factory worker. The 2nd time was much easier, the process the directing of staff to do tasks, dial 000, take staff away to the lunch room, gather towels etc. But I was also trained for first aid.

 

The length of time in your and medics hands was extraordinary therefore the warnings of them not surviving were apt. However, they survived and "what if's" will drift away over time. In reality they were either going to survive or not and they did. Being realistic is important because your mind can focus on what is not beneficial to you. People pass away, its the way life is, we need to be grateful they lived and accept that as what is real.

 

So my message to you is that these feelings of a life changing event will drift away over time and like me you'll only think about it when the topic arises like it is here today for me.

 

We humans are placed here, I believe, to help others in many different forms, you help this person survive, you'll have a deep connection forever, although the inmate I used CPR on I wasnt keen on having him keep in contact with me lol.

 

All the best and relax, it was a monumental task and you succeeded.

 

TonyWK

Many Thanks for your rational response TonyWK much appreciated 

First and only time I’ve performed CPR and it’s given me a sense of well done like you say if the the topic arises which it has in the last few weeks it kinda brings back the what ifs but as you say that feeling will drift away even though he wasn’t an inmate lol 😜 

thanks again regards Jensone 

Society doesn't often willingly give out pats on the back. Rest assured being a good human being willing to sacrifice some temporary mental health anxiety/ptsd is one good reason to exist. 

 

This experience will leave you humbled and so it should.

 

TonyWK 

Flowerbell
Community Member

Good on you for doing this, calling emergency and following instructions. It’s so difficult just for this to happen. I commend your bravery. 

After witnessing myself similar situations, you gave it a go and kept the person going until professionals arrived. The fact you were able to call emergency is impressive. I do believe you saved their life. 

I would suggest to reach out for trauma counselling to discuss this. It can be very traumatic to experience this. 

 

Many thanks for your response agree with you….. each day is a step forward and trying not to ask myself the what ifs ! 

Guest_32190766
Community Member

Hello

 

i just want to say I’m very proud of you. CPR is a physically and mentally challenging thing to do, especially on someone you know. 

My brain loves to come up with “what ifs” and for me it’s my anxiety and PTSD constantly thinking something will go wrong. I was a nurse for 2 years during Covid so I’ve seen a lot of near death and deaths. I just want to let you know that a lot of people linger on death or near death experiences and you’re not alone

Many thanks for your response  i appreciate your thoughts

Dig
Community Member

Hi Jensone, 

Firstly, good on you for saving the persons life ! Having experienced the similar event I  brought a young man back from death after a road accident where his head impacted the windscreen of a car, then he span full body length in the air & bounced twice when he returned to earth in the gutter, Motionless, bleeding from open fractures.  The matter had the usual police, ambulance. The most difficult part of the exercise is controlling you own emotions & dealing with a stranger. Some of the general public drove  me mad about 2 years, listening to their opinion  about what if this or that had happen. That make me  more stressed out than  dealing with the young man. It is quiet achievement what you have done. I have it to hand to the medical people who deal with such situations on a daily basis. 

Many thanks for your response and well done to you on your actions to save the young man not an easy feat by any means.

Think you are right as my situation is still relatively fresh in my mind late December 2024 when incident happened,the conversation still comes up with people that have heard what transpired and it brings up those what ifs again.

Agree medical and any triple 000 person really are the heroes 

Thanks for sharing your experience and so hope your doing well as it never leaves us,luckily our outcomes were positive 👏👏