May 2, 2013
Coach, trainer, cop save life of man at Lakeland
YORKTOWN — A father in his mid-50s who collapsed on
his way to watch his daughter’s softball game at Lakeland High School on
Wednesday was brought back to life by a trainer and a coach using a
portable defibrillator.
The father, who
had lost consciousness and wasn’t breathing when Lakeland athletic
trainer Amanda Tiffany and John Jay High School lacrosse coach Patrick
Chiappetta rushed to his aid, was recovering in stable condition
Thursday at Westchester Medical Center in Valhalla, school officials
said.
“There is a
family that is not mourning the loss of a father today because people
acted, and that is heavy stuff,” said Chiappetta’s boss, Christian
McCarthy, the athletic director for the Katonah-Lewisboro school
district. “Their decision to act saved a life, and there is no greater
classroom lesson than that.”
It
was the second such life-saving act in northern Westchester this week
tied to the use of an automated external defibrillator, or AED.
It
was one of those busy after-school weekdays in spring with multiple
games in progress across a single campus, and scores of spectators,
players and school officials on the scene.
The
man was headed to the junior varsity softball game and was just outside
the fence surrounding the school’s all-purpose athletic field when
everything stopped. MaryLu Fiori, a Lakeland field monitor, saw the man
collapse and yelled for help.
“I
knew my AED was at the end of the bench so I grabbed it and I ran as
fast as I could across the field,” said Chiappetta, 29, John Jay’s
junior varsity girls lacrosse coach and a father of two. “He was in bad
shape, on his back, so I hopped the fence and the Lakeland trainer
already had his shirt pulled up.”
“I opened my AED and the trainer put the pads on him and pushed the button,” Chiappetta said .
The
device can scan for irregular heartbeats and deliver a shock to restore
a healthy rhythm. It was enough to bring the man, whom officials
declined to identify, back to consciousness.
As
Tiffany and Chiappetta were at the man’s side, Yorktown police Officer
Larry Paniccia, the school’s resource officer, called 911 and joined in
the lifesaving efforts. Mohegan Lake ambulance responded and took him
from the scene.
“He
is awake and speaking with his family,” Lakeland High School Principal
Lorrie Yurish said Thursday. “The family is so grateful.”
The
incident came four days after a Lewisboro police officer used an AED
to revive a man who collapsed after mowing his lawn in Vista.
Other AED success stories this year have come from schools and sporting events.
On
April 7 at Suffern Middle School, a trainer and a coach revived a
72-year-old South Salem referee after he collapsed during a lacrosse
tournament. On April 1 at Lakeland’s Copper Beech Middle School,
teacher’s aide Janice Mills collapsed in a classroom and was revived by
staff members.
On
March 31 in Yonkers, 21-year-old Jim Murphy was revived by Yonkers
police after he collapsed playing an Easter Sunday basketball game.