logo
I swapped smoking for ‘healthier' vaping but was left ‘clinically dead' after puffing on my first ever e-cig

I swapped smoking for ‘healthier' vaping but was left ‘clinically dead' after puffing on my first ever e-cig

The Sun2 days ago

A WOMAN who began smoking at the age of eight was left with horrific third-degree burns across more than half of her body when her first vape exploded in her face.
Cherylee Parker decided to try a blueberry-flavoured vape after being enticed by the sweet-swelling fumes drifting into her apartment from her neighbours.
8
The 49-year-old was reaching into her fridge to get some food while vaping and claims the device suddenly "sparked" and set her elbow-length hair on fire.
Burning chunks of hair dropped onto her arm, setting her clothing and carpet alight.
Cherylee desperately tried to smother the flames on her top with a dressing gown but unintentionally stoked them so raced to the bathroom to throw water on herself.
But as the bathtub took "forever" to fill, she then decided to try the 'stop, drop and roll' method while dialling 911 as smoke and flames filled the apartment.
Cherylee, who doesn't work, said she was clinically dead when paramedics arrived and spent a week "dying over and over again" while in hospital.
After a three-month stint in hospital having 15 operations to treat burns all over her body, including her left ear and breast, Cherylee was discharged from hospital.
Two-and-a-half years on from her ordeal in November 2022, Cherylee is sharing her story so people know to 'stop, drop and roll', as she credits this for saving her life.
Cherylee, from Summertown, Tennessee, US, said: "Just before Thanksgiving around my apartment I was smelling blueberries and it just smelled so good.
"I said to someone 'are you smelling those blueberries?' they said 'yeah it's a vape'.
"I was like 'hmm that might save me from making a blueberry pie' so, as I was quitting smoking, I bought a vape pen.
Teen told he was coughing up 'pints' of blood due to a stomach ulcer caused by kebabs - 'excessive vaping' was to blame
"On Thanksgiving evening I was sitting in my chair, I'd just finished a movie on my tablet and was eating.
"I went to put the leftovers away while vaping and as I opened the fridge door it sparked and suddenly my hair was on fire.
"I was wearing jeans, a long-sleeved T-shirt and had my robe, which I wear when I'm freezing.
"I tried to use it to beat the flames out but it made the flames bigger and go up my arms and my face.
"I ran to the bathroom and turned the tub on, it felt like forever to get water in the tub.
"Stop, drop, roll was my very last chance. [I did that] my telephone was in my back pocket and I managed to call 911.
I don't remember the paramedics coming into me, I was dead but they revived me
Cherylee Parker
"At that point I screamed, I said 'God please take me. I'm ready, I can't do this' so he did.
"I don't remember the paramedics coming into me, I was dead but they revived me."
Cherylee was rushed to a nearby ER department before being transferred to the burns unit at Hurley Medical Center in Flint, Michigan.
There she underwent $2million-worth of treatment (equivalent to around £1.6million), covered by her health insurance, to treat the burns on her body, including skin grafts.
Cherylee said: "I spent a week dying over and over again, they call it circling the drain.
"I had burns across 55 per cent of my body, I didn't have anything less than third-degree burns.
8
8
8
8
"My left ear and breast were burned off and I had to have 15 surgeries. It was the worst pain - nobody realises unless you're a burns survivor."
Once discharged from hospital in February 2023 Cherylee, who had to learn how to walk again, went for regular check-ups where doctors removed dead skin and changed her bandages.
Cherylee is sharing her story to educate people about the dangers of fires and what to do if you face a similar situation.
Cherylee said: "I didn't know vape pens could blow up. They don't know what happened, it just malfunctioned.
"If you're ever unfortunately in the same position as me, my advice is to stop, drop and roll straight away, that should be your number one goal.
"Because in that moment there's a chance to save yourself, that's the only thing that's going to put the flames out.
"I'm not vaping anymore, one time was a good enough try for me. I started smoking when I was eight years old."
What is 'Stop, Drop and Roll'?
IF someone's clothing is on fire, use the following steps: Stop, Drop and Roll.
Stop the casualty from panicking and moving around as any movement will increase the flames.
Drop the casualty onto the ground and wrap him/her in a fire blanket or heavy fabric such as a coat or blanket.
Roll the casualty along the ground until the flames have been put out.
Source: St John Ambulance
8
8

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A cookbook taught me everything I know about home - and sobriety
A cookbook taught me everything I know about home - and sobriety

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

A cookbook taught me everything I know about home - and sobriety

If there was a single feeling that defined my 20s, it was a generalised allergy to the very concept of home: I learned it's a myth that you only run away from it once. If you have the skills, you can spend a lot of your life dodging comfort, security and a place to return to. Which I did because I was an alcoholic, and alcoholics are always suspicious of safety. The only true way to be safe is to not drink, after all, and you do not want to stop drinking above all else. This in turn informed my relationship to food. It goes that way for all of us: food is home. You're not really staying in a place unless you've cooked in it. Otherwise you're just a visitor. And because I had always wanted to be a visitor, I'd long been almost deliberately malnourished. I often boasted about my profoundly undistinguished palate, because everybody wants to ensure the worst decisions they make sound like some sort of quirky character trait. But then an odd thing happened: I quit drinking. I tried a few times, sometimes making it stick for a few months, once for over a year. And then finally, definitively, I just … stopped. I don't want to make it sound easy. I mean more that after years of trying to find sobriety, it seemed like suddenly sobriety found me. After that, on the odd day when I caught a glance of myself in the mirror, it seemed like the person there might be someone I might quite like, someday. It was around this time that I purchased an unusual gift for myself: a cookbook. The author was Nigel Slater, whose name rang a bell. Picking it up satisfied one of those odd urges that I had in the early days of a true commitment to sobriety. I later came to understand these urges were newfound pangs of self-preservation. I was immediately taken by the way Slater wrote about food. These were not just recipes. They were short poems, filled with astonishingly beautiful, compact phrases: at one point in Notes from the Larder, he describes garlic being as 'fresh and sweet as a baby's breath'. This poetry was what kept me going through a number of culinary disasters – I learned that before one makes something as wholly nourishing as Slater's macaroni and tomato pasta, they have to actually learn to cook pasta. But I got better – better in regards to cooking, and to all the other stuff too. I started to cook almost every meal, a profound change to a lifetime of takeaway. I made sweet teas and fish cakes; ricotta pancakes and pink lemonades. All of a sudden, I found I had a new sentence to describe myself. I'd had a few in my back pocket for a long time, all of them either tied to my profession or my addictions: I am an alcoholic, I am a writer, I am a painter, I am a chain smoker. But now I had one which was tied to neither self-destruction nor my career: I like to cook. And then something else miraculous happened: I met my partner, Rosie. I sometimes say that she taught me everything I know to be good in this world, and I mean it. The world makes sense to me now, because she is in it. Rosie likes to cook too. For many of our early days together, I was her sous-chef, chopping beside her in the kitchen, with a record on, astonished by this feeling that had come over me, which was the feeling of happiness. These days, I do as much of the cooking in our home as I can without denying Rosie her own culinary joy. I cook for Rosie; I cook for our housemate; I cook for my friends. Because I'm a writer, I often work from home, and one of my favourite things is making something that will be ready shortly after Rosie returns from work. It feels like a little gateway into the rest of the evening; a little marker that says, we are here together again and I have something for us to eat. Destruction is sudden. Healing is slow. You don't actually need to make that many decisions to ruin your life, but you have to make a great deal of decisions to improve it. If you're an addict, you need to stay sober every single day. It is work that never ends. What also never ends, but is only ever briefly satisfied: the desire to eat. When I return, almost daily, to Slater's cookbook, I am re-pledging the desire to not die; to simply, uncomplicatedly sustain myself. The other day I cooked a pasta bake. It was mostly done by the time I heard Rosie's key in the door, the smells of cheese, salt and herbs wafting through the kitchen. And when I heard it, I thought, with a thrill: oh, she's home. And I remembered again, properly, that I was too. Joseph Earp is a critic, painter and novelist. His latest book is Painting Portraits of Everyone I've Ever Dated (A$34.99, Hardie Grant)

Stunned TV host is told he has skin cancer during live on-air broadcast with dermatologist
Stunned TV host is told he has skin cancer during live on-air broadcast with dermatologist

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Stunned TV host is told he has skin cancer during live on-air broadcast with dermatologist

A Fox News TV host was left stunned after discovering he has skin cancer while live on air. Mike Jerrick, co-host of Good Day Philadelphia, brought dermatologist, Dr. Joanna Walker, on air before the pair discovered a likely-cancerous spot on the hosts' elbow. Walker, who works with the Tara Miller Melanoma Center at the University of Pennsylvania, told Jerrick that his spot has 'all the features' pointing to skin cancer. 'So this is a basal cell skin cancer,' Walker said pointing to Jerrick's arm. 'That has all the features of the most common type of skin cancer.' Walker reassured him that it was 'very treatable,' as it is one of the more 'slow growing' types of skin cancer. She told the host that he would need to have the spot removed, to which he asked: 'What are you gonna do to it? Burn it off?' 'This one probably needs to be cut and stitched,' Walker said. 'What!' Jerrick exclaimed. 'And then stich me up?' 'So this one is a very slow growing type of skin cancer, it's not gonna spread to anywhere else on your body,' Walker said. 'But it needs to be removed so it doesn't keep growing and taking over normal skin,' 'Oh, good lord,' Jerrick responded. He further told Fox News that he was entirely shocked by the discovery. 'I did say that we should have had her bring her [micro]scope because I wanted to check out of couple of things on my arms, so that part was planned,' he said. 'But I never really thought it was going to be skin cancer.' His co-host Alex Holley asked if he needed to make an appointment fairly soon, to which Walker firmly said that he should. 'When she blurted it out, I didn't get alarmed or anything,' Jerrick said. 'It was just like, "Oh dang, I should have done this a long time ago."' 'I was more shocked that she said she was going to cut it out instead of burn it off- that's where I got surprised,' he added. Jerrick is scheduled to have the spot removed on Friday, according to the outlet. 'I should be fine,' he said. 'She'll just suture me up and I'll be on my way.' Basal Cell Carcinoma is the most common type of cancer, with an estimated 3.6 million cases in the US annually. According to the Skin Cancer Foundation, BCC can look differently on a case by case basis but typically can appear as an open sore, red patches, pink growths, shiny bumps, scars or growths with elevated rolled edges. BCC most often occurs after exposure to ultraviolet radiation from the sun or tanning beds resulting in DNA damage.

Urgent outbreak alert as life-threatening disease surges in one Aussie state as wet weather fuels spike in cases
Urgent outbreak alert as life-threatening disease surges in one Aussie state as wet weather fuels spike in cases

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Urgent outbreak alert as life-threatening disease surges in one Aussie state as wet weather fuels spike in cases

Two more cases of malaria have been recorded in Queensland with residents warned the potentially deadly disease can lead to seizures and long-term cognitive issues. Queensland Health are investigating two more cases of locally acquired malaria, bringing the number of infections in the state this year to 71. The second locally acquired infection was recently found in the Torres Strait Islands local government area. The vast majority of cases (97 per cent) this year have come from overseas, mainly Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. But it's a worrying trend given just four cases were recorded in the same period in 2021. Twenty were recorded in 2022, 50 in 2023 and 69 in 2024. Recent wild weather in Far North Queensland has played a role in the spike in cases. Autumn was one of the wettest in Queensland's history, beating 100-year records with floodwaters a breeding ground for mosquitoes. Malaria is preventable and curable and can't be passed from person to person and is spread through the bites of infected Anopheles mosquitoes. Mater Health infectious diseases director Paul Griffin told ABC the outbreak would be contained to the far north of Australia. 'We don't have mosquitoes capable of passing malaria on all throughout the country, but certainly in the more tropical parts of our country, the Northern Territory and northern parts of Queensland,' he said. 'That's why in those areas we need to give people that advice to make sure we reduce the chance of local transmission.' The last cases acquired on mainland Australia were during an outbreak in north Queensland in 2002. 'Malaria used to be something that we had transmitted within Australia, but due to a host of different interventions locally, acquired malaria has not been something that we have really dealt with for some 40-odd years,' Mr Griffin said. Mr Griffin did however warn that those at risk of catching the disease needed to take the threat seriously. 'With more significant types of malaria, the severe consequences can be involvement of the brain, so cerebral malaria and even death,' he said. 'It is something that we do need to take seriously and make sure we take steps to limit how much it is able to be passed on in our country.' The most common early symptoms of malaria are fever, headache and chills and they usually start within 10 to 15 days of getting bitten by an infected mosquito.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store