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January
16, 2007 |

Table
of Contents:
I. Heart Attacks on Duty
II. Upcoming Street Survival Seminars

Heart
Attacks on Duty 
By Dave Smith Lead Street Survival Seminar
Instructor
Last Thursday, January
11th, 2007, Sergeant James H. Hardin, 35, died of a heart attack
while chasing a suspect along with his canine partner. This is the
first heart attack on duty recorded for this year following the ten
deaths we had from heart attacks last year.
One can't
study officer's deaths over the years and not be struck by the
similarities in these deaths and wonder what we might do to prevent
them. I have studied this phenomenon since my first assignment as a
fitness and officer survival trainer back in 1980. Often there is no
underlying disease in these fatalities and often they are relatively
young, under fifty.

So what do we know about
these deaths. First, they are almost always men, not shocking; men
are more prone to sudden death and cardiovascular diseases. On
average, men only live to an average age of 72 while women live to
an average age of 79. What variable does science agree on?
Surprisingly, many issues still remain unsolved and many questions
still remain unanswered in dealing with heart disease and heart
attacks.
Ask any expert and they
will tell you the key to a long life is picking the right parents.
Cute, but not something an individual has any control over! We can,
however, use our family history as a compensator to make an effort
to avoid inherited liabilities such as high risk of coronary disease
or diabetes. Diet, exercise, weight control, and medications can
help prevent many threats we might inherit from our parents, but
scientists still say it is a serious predictor of life span.
One fact that seems
pretty consistent in research is that one of the keys in surviving a
sudden heart attack is a high level of fitness, following an
exercise regimen should be basic to the law enforcement lifestyle
since we might be called upon at any moment to run, fight, climb, or
even swim, not only will fitness make us better officers it will
enhance our odds of surviving!
The one trouble with
exercise it increases our risk of death while we are doing it. It is
called "The Jogger's
Dilemma", the phenomena that things that increase our
odds of survival often increase our chance of death while doing
them. In other words, exercise increases your risk of death while doing it but decreases
your chance of death if you survive it! A great book on this is
Aaron Wildavsky's Searching
for Safety, if you are a trainer or administrator looking to
understand risk a little better it is a great resource.
This issue of exercise
then brings us to the topic of on duty deaths during or following
sudden intense strenuous exertion without warming up! Think about
it, we never get to warm up for a fight or foot pursuit; we are just
zero to sixty out of the vehicle like a greyhound out of the gate.
This is a dangerous thing for a human to do. It creates a serious
oxygen debt in some very important muscles...such as your heart! Way
back in the seventies UCLA took ten healthy firefighters and
students and had them due sudden, intense, near maximal, exercise
without warming up. Following this bout of exercise six of the ten
had abnormal ECG's! Six healthy men out of ten suddenly had abnormal
readings and it was not
related to their age, the men ranged from 20 to 52. (1)
This risk would seem to
explain the rare but tragic event we see annually of the officer who
wins a fight only to fall over from a heart attack! What do we do?
Well, first off, remember this is a rare occurrence. The odds of
this happening to you is rare and it would be great if you could
warm up before getting into that next fight, or foot pursuit, of
course you can't. The next best thing is to maintain a good level of
fitness.
I think too many folks
advocate running marathons and doing three miles daily. In fact,
most people aren't even built to run long distances,
it tears up their joints. There is a multitude of ways to improve
your fitness: walking, swimming, riding bikes, hiking, skating, and
many other activities; just find the ones you enjoy and do them!
None of this guarantees
you won't have a heart attack after running down and fighting a
suspect, but perhaps it will increase your odds of surviving the
number one cause of death in this country...coronary heart disease!
Stay safe,
Notes.
1.
Ischemic Response to Sudden Strenuous Exercise in Healthy Men, By R.
James Barnard, PhD Circulation 1973;48;936-942
II.
Upcoming Street Survival Seminars
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Seminar
Sponsors: |

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Seminar Location |
Dates |
Details |
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Street
Survival Seminar Atlantic
City,NJ |
January 23-24,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Atlanta
(Duluth),GA |
January 30-31,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Kansas
City,KS |
February 6-7,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Houston,TX |
February 12-13,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Spokane ,WA |
February 21-22,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Arlington,VA |
March 5-6,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Cincinnati
(Hamilton),OH |
March 12-13,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Boston,MA |
March 20-21,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Minneapolis,MN |
April 11-12,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Denver,CO |
April 17-18,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar for WOMEN Las Vegas,NV |
April 25-26,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Cleveland,OH |
May 16-17,
2007 |
Detail
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Street
Survival Seminar Lake
Tahoe,NV |
May 22-23,
2007 |
Detail
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Not
coming to your area? Please contact
Slavka Younger at Slavka.younger@trinitylearning.com
to find out how you can bring Street Survival seminar to your
department. |
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