Commentary

A mid-marathon cardiac arrest, an MD’s crisis of confidence


 

I also give credit to the City of New York Police Department, the FDNY, and the volunteers. Without them, I couldn’t have done what I did. It was a true team effort.

A few weeks later, the woman went home to Minnesota. She’ll never run a marathon again, but she’s still alive to this day. It turned out she had a single lesion called the “widow-maker” lesion. She was in perfect health and had just completed an ultramarathon a few months before; but she had a genetic predisposition. She still calls me every December to thank me for another Christmas.

There’s more.

One year after this whole thing, almost to the date, I got a call from my attorney. “The court just threw out the malpractice verdict,” he said. “You didn’t do anything wrong.”

I’m a man of faith. And I believe all this happened for a reason. Maybe God was sending me a message, and that’s why I heard a call for help on 59th Street in my 25th marathon among millions of people in a crowd.

I ran the marathon the next year. And when I got to that spot, I stopped and reflected. Nobody knew why I was standing there, but I knew. To this day, I could take you to that spot.

I turn 65 next July, and I plan to keep on running the race.

Dr. Strange is chair of medicine at Staten Island University Hospital, associate ambulatory physician executive of the Staten Island Region, and an internal medicine and geriatric medicine physician with Northwell Health.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Worm pulled from woman’s brain in case that ‘stunned’
MDedge Neurology
Overburdened: Health care workers more likely to die by suicide
MDedge Neurology
Editor’s note
MDedge Neurology
Lead pollutants as harmful to health as particulate matter
MDedge Neurology
A note from NORD
MDedge Neurology
Rare disease roundup
MDedge Neurology
New guidelines for determining brain death released
MDedge Neurology
Artificial intelligence in the office: Part 2
MDedge Neurology
Massive databases unleash discovery, but not so much in the U.S.
MDedge Neurology
Abstracts from the Neurology Exchange 2023, a virtual event held September 19-21, 2023
MDedge Neurology