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Wales Online
Wales Online
Kirstie McCrum & Benjamin Roberts-Haslam

Head whose heart stopped in playground 'lucky to be here'

A headteacher has spoken of how he's 'lucky to be here' after his heart stopped in the school playground. Nick Sheeran suffered a cardiac arrest on the last day of term.

But his life was saved by a defibrillator installed at the school after he fell seriously ill at Birkdale Primary School in Southport on July 15 last year. Seven months on from the fateful day, Mr Sheeran came back to work to cheers from the pupils, reports the Liverpool Echo.

The 55-year-old said: "My son had joined me because it was his last day at high school. One of the parents had donated some balloons as well so I went on the yard with my son to hang up the balloons for the children to say one last goodbye when their parents picked them up at 2pm.

"The year sixes were in their classrooms and up to 900 parents were outside. Everyone was going to come out and we were going to say one last goodbye.

"I started to go lightheaded and everything just went black. I was waking up and David Jessop, my deputy who had applied the defibrillator pads to me said 'get down, stay down, don't move'.

"I felt absolutely fine when I woke up but the pain came later. I had chest compressions and had broken a few ribs. Thanks to the clever technology, the defibrillator had picked up that I needed a shock and that's what brought me back."

Nick, whose 20-year career has seen him teaching in schools across Liverpool, moved to Birkdale Primary in 2010. Mark King of the Oliver King Foundation, a UK charity working to save lives by ensuring access to lifesaving defibrillators and training staff in CPR, reached out to the school.

The foundation was started after Liverpool schoolboy Oliver died when his heart stopped during a swimming lesson in March 2011. Mark has since spent the last 11 years getting machines put into schools following the heartbreaking death of his 12-year-old son at King David High School in Childwall.

Nick Sheeran headteacher at Birkdale Primary School (Colin Lane/Liverpool Echo)

Nick is now the 68th person to be saved thanks to a defibrillator provided by the foundation. He said: "I got the defibrillator in for the children.

"Who would have thought it would be me who needed it? I'm very lucky to still be here.

"It was lovely to be back with the kids. I was getting cards and video messages from them.

"David and Rachel (Ramsden, Mr Sheeran's other deputy) have done an amazing job at the school while I've been away. They set up an assembly with Mark (King) last week.

"I could hear them saying to the children how lovely it would be if I was there - then I walked out and they were all cheering."

Now the dad-of-three, who lives in Scarisbrick, is calling for defibrillators to be installed in more public places following the announcement that defibrillators will be installed in all state-funded schools by the end of the academic year.

He said: "The campaign now needs to turn to being in public places. No matter how much CPR you do if you don't have a defibrillator you're going to go.

"A cardiac arrest is an entirely different thing to a heart attack. I'm a healthy man, I don't drink, I don't smoke."

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