NFL: Damar Hamlin engaged in the fight against cardiac arrest

Joe Biden received football player Damar Hamlin at the White House on Thursday, who suffered a cardiac arrest in the middle of a match in January, and who has since campaigned for the generalization of defibrillators in schools.

The White House tweeted a photo showing the 25-year-old Bills NFL player alongside the US president in the Oval Office.

“Damar Hamlin’s courage, resilience and mindset have inspired the American people,” Joe Biden wrote on Twitter.

He also, according to a statement from the White House, “welcomed his efforts” to change the legislation on cardiac defibrillators.

Before going to the White House, the sportsman had defended in Washington, with American parliamentarians, a bill which aims to generalize these devices in schools, colleges and high schools.

He said, on Twitter, that he wants to “use (his) story to bring about real change. »

Between 7,000 and 23,000 young Americans suffer sudden cardiac arrest each year, according to the bill that Damar Hamlin supports, and it is the leading cause of death among young athletes.

Damar Hamlin had suffered a cardiac arrest on January 2, following a terrible shock to the chest suffered while tackling an opponent, during a regular season game against the Cincinnati Bengals.

After remaining in critical condition for several days, the Bills player regained consciousness and left the Buffalo hospital on January 11.

One of the doctors who operated on Hamlin warned his recovery would be “a long way to go”.

Millions of viewers watched it crumble live, a reminder of just how dangerous the country’s most popular sport is.

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