Two EMTs left their respective activities on Sunday afternoon in order to save the life of a man who collapsed and succeeded in resuscitating him in just five minutes.

Bat Yam - On Sunday, just after noon, a man in his 60s collapsed outside of a factory on Ha’Amal Street in Bat Yam. According to eye-witnesses the man had stepped outside of the factory where he was working and collapsed on the street just outside the main entrance. Worried onlookers called emergency services for help. 

Michael Tal Cohen, who lives in Givat Ze’ev but works in a metal factory in Bat Yam a few streets away from where the incident occurred,  and Nir Dorfman, who learns in a Kollel nearby, both received the emergency alert on their United Hatzalah communications devices and rushed to assist. 

The two volunteer EMTs arrived less than two minutes later and found the man lying on the ground. After checking the man’s vital signs and finding none, they initiated CPR performing compressions and assisted breathing. A minute later, an ambulance arrived and joined their lifesaving efforts. Together, the combined team performed CPR, including attaching a defibrillator, for less than three minutes until the man clenched his hand, a sign that he had regained a pulse.

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“It was an incredibly quick CPR,” explained Cohen, who is married with 5 children and makes the trip to work each day in Bat Yam. “I have been present at many cases where CPR has been performed in the past and this was one of the fastest successful CPR efforts that I have ever participated in.”  

Dorfman added, “Once the paramedic saw that the man’s hand moved he terminated the CPR efforts and after another minute the man began breathing on his own once more. We continued to care for him, but he was no longer in imminent danger and we were all thankful that he had survived his ordeal. I’m sure that the speed in which we responded had something to do with how quickly he began to recover.” 

“I’m happy that I merited to be a part of this and help save this man’s life today,” Dorfman concluded. “While I don’t know the other responder who helped me save this man, we are now connected by a shared bond of saving him. That is part of the beauty of having a network of volunteers, people from all over come together to save lives. It isn’t every day that this type of thing happens, and it is a truly wonderful feeling to return to my studies knowing that I managed to save someone’s life”