Except this ...When you perform CPR on a person, you cause damage to the rib cage and the ribs conneting to the spine. That's why Hamlin has lung damage at the present. l incuded the statement by Sports Medicine Cardiologists ....There is no evidence of the claims made these so called "experts" concerning athletes collapsing due to the shots. The deaths of athletes has been due to outlying conditions that existed. ......My advantage over you? I've been there and particpated in performing CPR on person during a football contest ......My wife is an RN and is touch with numerous Doctor's dedicated to keeping track on this .....Doctor's involved with the University of Alabama and Auburn University .......Or are you simply a member of the conspiracy crowd that follows the pack?
Nice try....
McCullough cites peer-reviewed study data. Not some "I think" statement from a sports med cadiologist-- do you even know what that is?
It's a sports med doctor, with an interest in cardiology. Jonathan Drezner, MD is the team doc for the Seattle Seahawks. He's not even a cardiologist. He's licensed to practice family medicine.
He is board-certified in Family Medicine and has a Certificate of Added Qualification in Sports Medicine.
Your advantage over me?
What is that supposed to mean? lol
Your advantage over me is that your wife is an RN in touch with doctors? Let me one-up ya. My wife and I retired after many years in Emergency Medical Services. She was a paramedic and I was an EMT/Firefighter. Together over the course of our careers, we have done chest compressions (CPR) on hundreds of patients, and defibrillated at least a hundred. But go ahead... educate me on cracking ribs.
Here is a link to one of the studies McCullough cites-
Oh looky here...... a connection to University of Washington in Seattle-- except from an actual cardiologist. Professional jealousy at work Dr Drezner???
Peter Andrew McCullough was born in
Buffalo, New York, on December 29, 1962. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree from
Baylor University in 1984 and his
Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree from the
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in 1988.He completed his residency in internal medicine at the
University of Washington in Seattle, a cardiology fellowship in 1991, and practiced internal medicine in
Grayling, Michigan, for two years before enrolling in the
University of Michigan School of Public Health, earning a
Master of Public Health (MPH) degree in 1994.
Career
After receiving his MPH, McCullough was a cardiovascular fellow at
William Beaumont Hospital in the
Detroit metropolitan area until 1997. He then worked at the
Henry Ford Heart and Vascular Institute in Detroit until 2000, served as section chief of cardiology of the
University of Missouri–Kansas City School of Medicine, and returned to William Beaumont Hospital where he worked from 2002 to 2010. He spent the next four years as chief academic and scientific officer of the
St. John Providence Health System, Detroit, before joining the
Baylor University Medical Center in 2014. McCullough entered into a confidential separation agreement with
Baylor Scott & White Medical Center in February 2021. In July, in response to his promotion of
misinformation about COVID-19, Baylor sued McCullough to prevent him falsely claiming any current association with
Baylor Health.
McCullough is a founder and current president of the Cardio Renal Society of America and co-editor-in-chief of
Cardiorenal Medicine,
[12]the society's journal, and also editor of
Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine.
He has conducted several studies on running and heart disease, and co-described the term Phidippides cardiomyopathy, a heart condition found in some high endurance athletes.