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North Texas cardiologist jumps into action to save collapsed cyclist

North Texas cardiologist jumps into action to save collapsed cyclist

Yahoo10-02-2025
The Brief
A Baylor Scott & White cardiologist jumped into action to save a collapsed cyclist.
Matthew Evans performed chest compressions on Bill Parmelee for 10 minutes.
Evans hopes people learn CPR to save more lives.
A cardiologist in the right place at the right time helped save a 71-year-old cyclist who collapsed while on a ride.
It is a remarkable story of what can happen when you pay attention to your surroundings and don't hesitate to jump into action.
What Happened
Every Saturday, 71-year-old former triathlete Bill Parmelee hops on his bike for a 48-mile ride.
The route takes him from Bedford up to Southlake then back home.
Last Saturday, it was the same routine, until he reached a hill in Westlake and keeled over.
The last thing Parmelee remembers before he blacked out is seeing a car.
The person behind the wheel was Matthew Evans, a cardiac electrophysiologist.
"I saw Bill coming up the hill the opposite direction and he looked pretty bad when I saw him, he was really struggling," recalled Evans.
When Parmelee fell off his bike, Evans ran over and checked for a pulse.
Parmelee's pulse stopped as Evans dialed 911.
"I think I literally said out loud, okay here we go, and started chest compressions at that moment," recalled Evans.
Evans continued CPR for the next 10 minutes until police arrived and got an AED to shock Parmelee.
A neighbor set FOX 4 a video of Evans' life-saving measures. In the video, you can see him get emotional. He says this was the moment Parmelee came back to life.
"He literally reentered the world at that moment," said Evans.
Parmelee went to the ER where doctors discovered he had a blocked artery that caused the cardiac arrest.
He had a stint put in and is healing from six broken ribs as a result of the chest compressions.
A week removed from the incident, he's already feeling better than before.
What they're saying
"I look at it as I'm very, very fortunate, and I really am trying to figure it out. I know I'm about to have a grandchild this year. Being a granddad, I know I'm saved to do that and maybe promote heart health. I'm still trying to figure it out," said Parmelee.
When the two met after the rescue, there was an immediate heartfelt connection.
Parmelee believes he wouldn't be here without Evans' heroic actions.
He says he has learned some lessons of his own, like always riding with a buddy, paying attention to any changes in your body and to get calcium-scoring tests to monitor your heart health.
What they're saying
"This was the first time that I can say my intervention made a huge difference," said Evans.
"The CPR is the only reason I'm talking to you today," said Parmelee.
What you can do
Evans hopes this is a sign for everyone to learn CPR so you can save a life too.
"I think that the best thing that can come of this besides him being around for his grandchild to be born is to also help spread awareness that this is not a hard thing to do. This is not a hard thing to learn how to do, anyone can do what I did," said Evans.
The Source
Information in this article comes from an interview with Bill Parmelee and Matthew Evans.
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Anti-vaccine myths surged on social media ahead of the CDC shooting
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Anti-vaccine myths surged on social media ahead of the CDC shooting

In the weeks and months before the Aug. 8 shooting at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention headquarters in Atlanta, posts tying Covid vaccines to mental illness accrued millions of views online. Previously more tightly moderated, some of the world's largest social media platforms now operate with far fewer guardrails, allowing vaccine misinformation to flourish. On X, for example, verified accounts with hundreds of thousands of followers openly claimed in recent weeks that Covid vaccines act like 'chemical lobotomies,' which is false. On Facebook, health influencers with broad reach alleged that Covid vaccines cause severe brain damage or other severe side effects such as cancer, despite no scientific basis for those claims. And on TikTok, videos repeating the debunked claim that vaccines cause autism drew hundreds of thousands of views this year, spreading doubt to wide audiences. 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The paper, which British researchers published in JAMA Psychiatry, found that depression and other mental illnesses were elevated for up to a year in people with severe Covid who hadn't gotten a Covid vaccine. And in the Yale preprint paper, posted on an online platform where researchers can share and receive feedback about unpublished work, researchers outlined what they called a 'post-vaccination syndrome,' a collection of various symptoms that they said resembled long Covid. The report looked at 64 people — 42 with the proposed syndrome and 22 without — and found that participants with the syndrome reported depression at higher rates than other vaccinated people. The aim of the report wasn't to find out whether Covid vaccines were linked to depression, nor did it establish such a link. Instead, it examined how people's immune systems reacted to the shots. 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Gaffney, of Harvard Medical School, said some of the preprint paper's authors are 'very serious scientists and people held in high esteem,' but he called the symptoms branded as 'post-vaccine syndrome' in the paper 'disparate.' 'We should just think twice before we enshrine new diagnoses that are premised on a cause-and-effect relationship that may be tenuous,' he said. Vaccine opponents and skeptics have taken the research and run with it, stretching the limits of what experts say is accurate. After the Yale preprint paper was published, Rogan mentioned the research on his show. Rogan, the No. 1 podcaster in the country by some charts, generally referred to vaccine side effects in the segment and said the findings in the preprint paper — which he referred to as a 'study' without noting that it hadn't yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal — were evidence of a massive cover-up. 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'A guardian angel': Teen saves choking Texas Roadhouse employee with Heimlich maneuver
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USA Today

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'A guardian angel': Teen saves choking Texas Roadhouse employee with Heimlich maneuver

SOUTH BEND — Fifteen-year-old Valeria Markiewicz was eating at Texas Roadhouse with her family for her mother's birthday dinner when she saw something alarming — an employee choking. And also alarming was the fact that nobody seemed to know how to help. The employee, Dekari Henderson, said he was talking with his manager while eating a steak kabob when he realized a piece had gotten stuck in his throat. His manager tried to help, Henderson said, but he couldn't dislodge the food. Henderson said he'd almost drowned as a child, so he'd experienced what it feels like to be in a life-threatening situation. And when he saw his manager wasn't able to help him, Henderson said, he knew he was in another one. "I looked back at him … and I honestly gave up that day," he said. "Sad to say, but I did, because I knew my life was fading." But Markiewicz didn't hesitate. "I was like, 'Oh my goodness, something has to be done,'" she said. "… He was turning purple, his lips were a different color. And so I ran over there, and I'm like, 'I'm CPR certified, I got this.'" Markiewicz performed the Heimlich maneuver on Henderson, helping him expel the food and ultimately saving his life. Henderson described Markiewicz as "a guardian angel," saying he wouldn't be alive today if it weren't for her. "She beat the life into me," he said. "That's the best way I can explain it." Markiewicz learned life-saving techniques in a high school class Markiewicz recently finished her freshman year at New Prairie High School, and she said she was able to help Henderson because of one of the classes she'd taken. During the year, she was enrolled in a biomedical science class taught by Tonya Aerts, who now works at Legacy Medical Academy after 19 years of teaching at New Prairie. Aerts, who won a national award this year for her work promoting sudden cardiac arrest preparedness, said Markiewicz and the other students in the class had just earned their CPR certifications in fall 2024 when the incident occurred in January 2025. She said she remembered the day Markiewicz told her about what had happened. "I come into work on a Monday morning, and there's Valeria standing at my door, which was unusual, and she was so excited to tell me, I quote, 'I saved a life this weekend,'" Aerts said. "And I was just so excited for her, but so impressed with her courage and her bravery to step up when other people didn't know what to do." Aerts has been instrumental in encouraging Indiana schools to become "Heart Safe" by meeting set standards and conducting regular emergency preparedness training. She said this is the second time someone's life has been saved because of training at the New Prairie United School Corp.; when a parent collapsed in the parking lot of New Prairie Middle School due to a cardiac arrest over a year ago, school staff was able to respond and revive him, and he survived. Aerts nominated Markiewicz for the LaPorte County Citizen of the Year Award, an annual award from the LaPorte County Emergency Medical Services that recognizes citizens who have made a difference in the community. In May, Markiewicz was named the award's 2025 recipient. Markiewicz said she'd learned a variety of life-saving techniques in Aerts' class, including CPR, the Heimlich maneuver and how to stop bleeding. And it was because of Aerts' class that Markiewicz knew what to do, she said. "Mrs. Aerts, she always taught us, if there was something there, and no one was running up, and if you knew how to do it, you should go run and do it," Markiewicz said. "… She really has a special place in my heart. Because of her, now I helped a life, and maybe I could help multiple more." 'Everything happens for a reason' In the months since the incident, Henderson said, he's seen a significant change in his life. For one, although he said he's "not super religious," he's started attending church more. Henderson said he takes care of his mother, who lost a lung during the pandemic. He said he's grateful to Markiewicz for saving him and allowing him to continue caring for his mom, adding that "everything happens for a reason." "It truly was a blessing that she was there to save me, because without her, I don't know where my family would be; I don't know what my mom would be doing," he said. "… My mom, she's like my rock. Everything I do, I do for her. … I was literally about to lose her." Markiewicz's school, New Prairie High, is also where senior Mark Mayfield collapsed in a school hallway and tragically died from a cardiac arrest in 2017. Mayfield's mother, Diane Mayfield, said from the perspective of a mother who has lost a son, it's vital that people know what to do in an emergency. "You don't understand until it happens to you, but it's devastating. So any chance our children have to survive something is just priceless," she said. "… Just being prepared — and, you know, hopefully you don't ever need it — but just one life saved, it means the world." And Markiewicz agreed, saying she's seen firsthand how learning life-saving techniques like CPR and the Heimlich can mean the difference between life and death. She said she believes everyone who can should earn their CPR certification, so they'll be prepared to respond like she did. "It makes me more grateful that I got CPR certified and stuff," she said. "It makes me grateful that I learned all this, and I took the time to do it." Markiewicz added that she wants to go into nursing as a career, giving her even more opportunities to help people. She said the incident has changed her perspective, as well. In the moment, Markiewicz said, she felt a mix of pride that she knew how to help Henderson and relieved that he was OK. And in the months since, knowing that she can respond in a crisis has given her a sense of empowerment and confidence that she'd be able to do it again, she said. "I've completed great accomplishments before, but nothing, like, ever this great before," Markiewicz said. "… I pass all my tests and everything, and that's a good accomplishment. But to step up this big, that's, like, something to be really, really proud of." Email South Bend Tribune staff reporter Rayleigh Deaton at rdeaton@

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