[h=1]Isn't that our big boss doing CPR?[/h]
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<!-- /block -->January 11, 2014 - 1:12am
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[h=2]By:[/h]Jasmine Lim
TNP PHOTO: Gavin Foo
Dr Ng Yih Yng (above, far left), 39, was cycling with his family when he noticed a crowd had gathered near the end of the East Coast Park connector on Dec 15.
There were people helping the man. They had been doing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), but stopped because they thought he had a pulse.
Dr Ng, who is the chief medical officer of the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF), said: “I checked him again and I realised that he did not have a pulse. He had agonal breathing, which was the breath of a dying man.”
He told the group to continue the CPR, and he called for an ambulance. When the SCDF team reached the scene, they were surprised to find their boss performing CPR on the patient.
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<!-- /block -->January 11, 2014 - 1:12am
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[h=2]By:[/h]Jasmine Lim
TNP PHOTO: Gavin Foo
Dr Ng Yih Yng (above, far left), 39, was cycling with his family when he noticed a crowd had gathered near the end of the East Coast Park connector on Dec 15.
There were people helping the man. They had been doing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), but stopped because they thought he had a pulse.
Dr Ng, who is the chief medical officer of the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF), said: “I checked him again and I realised that he did not have a pulse. He had agonal breathing, which was the breath of a dying man.”
He told the group to continue the CPR, and he called for an ambulance. When the SCDF team reached the scene, they were surprised to find their boss performing CPR on the patient.