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Bingley cyclist's 'huge debt' to life-saving strangers

Bingley cyclist's 'huge debt' to life-saving strangers

BBC News13-06-2025

A cyclist who suffered a cardiac arrest while riding by the side of a canal has thanked the strangers who helped save his life and gave him a "second chance".Joost Smeele, 61, was riding past the landmark Bingley Five Rise Locks on the Leeds and Liverpool Canal on 2 May when he collapsed. Passers-by, including volunteer lock-keeper Richard Breese, rushed to his aid and Mr Smeele was given CPR before paramedics arrived to take him to hospital.Mr Smeele, a retired business analyst and former scout leader from Bingley, said the experience was "very humbling" and he owed those who helped him "a huge debt".
"Their immediate action means I'm as healthy as I am now, otherwise it could have been so different," he said.
Following Mr Smeele's collapse, a local cafe owner used a defibrillator in an attempt to resuscitate Mr Smeele, while another Good Samaritan started to perform life-saving CPR.Meanwhile, Mr Breese said he had been in a boat cleaning the canal when a pedestrian raised the alarm over Mr Smeele's plight.He said he immediately "went into training mode", having previously learned CPR, and he took over compressions from the other man who had become tired."I just dropped the rake we were using to clean out the debris from the canal and ran," Mr Breese said."It's the first time I've ever had to do it for real. When I put my hands on his chest and felt he was warm, there was a split-second realisation this was a real person and not a training dummy."Mr Breese said he felt "a lot of gratification that between us - and it was a team effort - we've managed to save Joost's life, or at least give the first aid treatment before we could successfully pass him onto the paramedics".
Mr Smeele said he could not remember the incident itself, but said he now felt in good health, having since had two stents fitted to his heart."I've a painful rib bone, but that means the CPR was done properly," he said"Other than that, I feel normal. I just don't have the stamina. I've lost my sense of taste and my sense of smell. They may come back. They're not life-changing.""I do feel as though I've got a second chance," Mr Smeele added."I have an opportunity to make a difference. It's a gift that's been given to me."
Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

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