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NEWS:
Defibrillator helps save life of Brightwaters man at ballgame
By Erik Holm
STAFF WRITER
November 18, 2002
When his doctor walked into the emergency room a few hours
after John Tierney's heart stopped on Saturday night, he took
one look at his patien and pronounced him blessed. "You're a
very lucky man," the doctor said. Tierney, who suffered the
heart attack in the stands moments before the kickoff of a
high school playoff game between Locust Valley and Seaford,
was revived by a defibrillator that had been on the sidelines.
The heart-starting device was there, in part, because of the
efforts of one Northport couple, who believe a defibrillator
could have saved their 14-year-old son, Louis Acompora, who
died after being struck on the chest while playing lacrosse in
2000. Defibrillators will be required at every high school
sporting event in New York State beginning Dec. 1, thanks to a
new state law the Acomporas had pushed for. But the Locust
Valley school district and parents' groups had purchased their
district's defibrillators more than two years ago, not long
after Louis Acompora's death. When he heard about Tierney late
Saturday night, Louis' father, John Acompora, said he "got
goose bumps."
"It's extremely gratifying. This is exactly the sort of thing
we've been
telling people," he said yesterday. "The people who could be
saved by thisare teachers, janitors, parents, anyone at the
event." Tierney, 61, an attorney from Brightwaters, was listed
in critical but stable condition yesterday. But family members
said that he is well on the
way to recovery and would likely be moved out of the critical
care unit today. Tierney had lived with an irregular heartbeat
for years without incident and had stents put in his heart in
the past year as a preventive measure. Between cracking jokes
about his health and his luck yesterday, said his wife,
Cecilia Tierney, Tierney was expressing amazement over the
trainer, the doctors and the firefighter who happened to be on
the sidelines at Hofstra University's stadium, where the
playoff game was being held.
He was amazed, too, that there was a defibrillator on hand,
thanks to the efforts of Locust Valley school
administrators,boosters and the Acomporas. "Good things come
from tragedy sometimes," Cecilia Tierney said. "He just can't
believe there are so many good people in the world . . ."
Tierney is not the first on Long Island to be saved because of
the efforts by the Acomporas to make defibrillators more
widely available. Among those who have been helped is Muhammad
Shah of Nesconset, 15, a student at Smithtown High School,
revived in December with a defibrillator purchased by school
officials.
James Hanrahan of St. James was on the third hole at St.
George's Golf and County Club in Stony Brook in September 2001
when he had a heart attack. Club officials had heard of the
Acomporas' efforts and completed their training on their newly
purchased defibrillators just two weeks before. They shocked
him three times before restoring a normal heartbeat. Hanrahan
said
yesterday that he has played roughly 140 rounds of golf since.
About the Acomporas, Hanrahan said:
"Without them, I wouldn't be here. They have done an
incredible job in a small amount of time. They are wonderful
people."
Copyright (c) 2002, Newsday, Inc. |