Western nov dec final 2014 web

Page 22

Bison Hero - Vijaydeep Sahasi

Bison

Hero Vijaydeep Sahasi

I

n August, Vijaydeep Sahasi, a Bison truck driver was on a remote stretch of Highway 5 just past Merritt in B.C. when he saw a parked car on the side of the highway and a man trying to flag him down. Sahasi’s heroism no doubt saved the British Columbia woman’s life. “My wife’s having a heart attack!” the man told Sahasi. Sahasi called 9-1-1 and rushed to the car, where he found the woman still strapped in her seatbelt. Following the instruction of the 9-1-1 operator, Sahasi got the woman out of the car and lay her down on the ground. There was no one else but Sahasi and the woman’s husband to help and Sahasi had not done CPR before. He was nervous, he says, because he knew that in some cases, amateurs performing CPR have broken the victim’s ribs or caused other injuries. But with the help of the 9-1-1 operator, Sahasi performed the necessary CPR procedure. It took thirty minutes for first responders to arrive, the woman repeatedly started and then stopped breathing. Sahasi grew tired, but never gave up, stopping only when paramedics arrived and took over. The woman was taken to the hospital and survived. The next day, her husband called Sahasi to share the good news: his wife was doing well, had no cracked ribs or significant problems as a result of the CPR. At the hospital, the doctors had told him, “You’re really lucky your wife is alive, given that this happened in the middle of nowhere. Only about two percent of people would survive cardiac arrest in such a remote location.” Sahasi, who has driven for Bison more than a year, commented: “I believe that what goes around, comes around. I was already running a little late, but destiny had planned something else for me that day.” He continued: “It made me feel so good that the doctor said I did [the CPR] perfectly. If done too lightly, the heart wouldn’t have started functioning. If done too hard, her ribs might have been fractured. Neither happened, and it is really, really rewarding to know she survived. I never expected this [Bison job] would take me somewhere like this.” For his act of kindness, the Truckload Carriers Association (TCA) has named Sahasi a Highway Angel and has presented him with a certificate, patch, lapel pin, and truck decal. Manitoba-based Bison Transport also received a certificate acknowledging that one of its drivers is a Highway Angel. 22

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ieh g`l Agsq mhIny dI hY[ bwiesn tRWsport kMpnI dw tr`k fRweIvr ivjYdIp shwsI hweIvyA 5 ‘qy jw irhw sI[ auh Ajy bI sI dw Sihr myirt lMiGAw hI sI ik ie`k suMnswn QW ‘qy aus ny Acwnk vyiKAw ik hweIvyA ‘qy ie`k pwsy kwr lw ky ies koL KVHw ie`k ivAkqI rukx dw ieSwrw kr irhw sI[ Awpxw tr`k ie`k pwsy lw ky jdoN ies ivAkqI koL shwsI phuMcw qW aus ny d`isAw ik aus dI pqnI nUM Acwnk idl dw dOrw pY igAw hY[ shwsI ny sikMtW ‘c 9-1-1 nUM Pon kIqw Aqy nwL hI kwr ijs ‘c AOrq sI kol cly igAw[ aus ny vyiKAw ik idl dy dOry nwL qVp rhI AOrq dI sIt bYLt Ajy vI l`gI hoeI sI[ ies smyN dOrwn 9-1-1 dw Awprytr ny aus nUM Pon ‘qy hdwieqW dyxIAW SurU kr id`qIAW[ shwsI ny sIt bYlt KOLH ky AOrq nUM bwhr k`iFAw Aqy zmIn ‘qy iltw id`qw[ shwsI nUM sI pI Awr sbMDI pihlW koeI jwxkwrI nhIN sI ies leI aus nUM ijs qrHW Awprytr v`loN ikhw jWdw irhw auh nwLo nwL aus qrHW hI krdw irhw[ shwsI bhuq GbrwieAw hoieAw sI ikauN ik November / December 2014


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