Skip to main content

The Oceana Echo - Volume 3, Issue 22, October 24, 2025

Page 1

INSIDE

Volume 3, Issue 22 October 24, 2025 Total Raised: $75,835 Lead this Legacy

: Lakeside Solar public hearing yields feedback

REFLECTIONS OF OUR COMMUNITY

SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE

Please Donate

YOUR YOUR LOCALLY LOCALLY OWNED OWNED ANDAND OPERATED OPERATED NONPROFIT NONPROFIT NEWS NEWS SOURCE SOURCE YOUR LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED NONPROFIT NEWS SOURCE Thank you to our most recent donors to our Lead this Legacy Fundraising Campaign John Briel James Kurilla

READER:

Michelle Landis Duane Kelley

Richard & Mary Sue Carnes Chuck & Linda Brimmer

Rilla Nameth David Roseman

Part 1: The Heart of the Matter - Celebrating Tom & Barbara Sims By Sharon Hallack The Oceana Echo Community Correspondent

BIG RAPIDS, MI 49307 PERMIT NO 62

RESIDENTIAL POSTAL CUSTOMER ECRWSS

PAID

PRSRT STANDARD NON PROFIT U.S. POSTAGE

October is National Sudden Cardiac Arrest Awareness Month, and the Oceana Echo invites our readers to enjoy a two-part informative series highlighting the stories of two Oceana County residents whose lives were saved by the heroic efforts of family and friends following their own cardiac events this summer. We, along with their family and friends, are so thankful they are still with us. May their stories inspire, challenge and bring hope to all. Two days before Mother’s Day this year, Barbara and Tom Sims, of Hart, were spending the night at home celebrating their 15th wedding anniversary. They enjoyed preparing a special surf and turf meal, complete with champagne, and were enjoying it together in their library when Barb told Tom she’d take care of the dishes and asked him to pick out a movie. Suddenly the evening took a very different turn, as Barbara explained, “Tom was perfectly fine. We’d just finished our

dinner and were enjoying looking at our wedding book. Normally I would have started putting things away in the kitchen, but then I told myself, ‘No, it’s my anniversary too - this can wait.’ I went to join Tom in the library, and he was completely unconscious. He didn’t have a pulse and was not breathing. His eyes were open, but I thought I’d lost him. Immediately I thought to check his mouth to see if he’d choked on some food and he bit my finger. I knew he was still in there and immediately called 911.” She stopped to share that she often can’t find her phone, and if she can, it isn’t always charged. Miraculously, it was right on their coffee table. Barbara continued, “I called 911 and had them on speakerphone, but I hung up, saying I was certified in CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) and to please hurry. In hindsight, I wished I would have stayed on the phone with 911. Tom was slumped down on our loveseat, and I couldn’t move him. I started doing compressions, but the chair was too soft. I grabbed our wedding book and put it behind a pillow he had behind his back and started again.” Those who have taken CPR training in the distant past may remember it was recommended to give 15 compressions, followed by two breaths, until help arrived. Recent studies have shown that it is just as effective to perform chest compressions only. Current training teaches participants to do chest compressions to the beat of the Bee Gees song “Stayin’ Alive.” That’s how fast someone needs to do CPR compressions for it to be the most effective. And that’s exactly what Barbara did. “I could feel I was getting his ribs to move. They tell you in training you should press hard enough to make them go down. I worked at compressions for a good five minutes,

doctor what the chances are that someone is brought back after something like this. The EMTs relayed that it is rare they get to talk to someone after such an event.” Tom recalled that when he got to the hospital, Barb hadn’t arrived, and he was able to sign his own admission paperwork. “I talked with Mike (Barefoot) all the way to Grand Rapids, and he said in 15 years of running up and down the freeway with patients, that was the first time anyone had signed their own paperwork!” Tom continued, “Thankfully I didn’t have any blockages. I had a pacemaker/defibrillator installed, and through the wonders of modern technology, it can start my heart again if needed. My heart is monitored 24/7. For Barb, the reason to do this story is the importance of knowing how to do this (CPR), but for me the thing I want people to know is what I learned about the difference between a cardiologist and a heart failure doctor. I now have both of them, but they are different doctors. They train and practice differently, they look at different studies, they treat patients differently and both are necessary in my situation.” Today Tom is back home, and one would never know by looking at him that his heart had completely stopped nu-

merous times back in May. Since performing these lifesaving maneuvers, Barb has shared with others, when given the opportunity, what happened and how important it is to be prepared. “I’ve been taking CPR recertification courses since I was a young teacher. Doing the compressions felt exactly the way it did in training. I realized if I can do this, anybody can do this. We can’t depend on emergency help arriving right away. Have your phone near you….and charged. Better yet, have a landline. And most importantly, get the training yourself. You never know who you might need to help. I never expected to have to use it, but I’m so glad I was able to do it when the time came. I’m just so thankful for every day together since then.” The Sims wish to thank all of the emergency responders who came to their rescue that day in May, from Life EMS Mike Barefoot and Dan Medema and from the Hart Fire Department Mark Haynor, Lynn Schiller, Kyle Dillingham and Dan Liembeck. Read Part 2 of this two-part series next week; hear about how friends performed CPR on another friend in July and saved their life, and how to be a part of making medical assistance more available.

Barbara and Tom Sims and it was getting labori- ed to be alone. I expectous. I kept calling Tom’s ed to see a corpse when name and telling him, I got to the hospital. I ‘I’m not losing you on our found out later Tom had anniversary!’ Just before flatlined a third time in help arrived, Tom start- the ambulance on the ed to blink his eyes and way to the hospital, but move his head. I could when I got out of my car hardly believe it. The CPR at the hospital, I could was working! Finally, after hear Tom’s laugh and him what seemed like forever, telling the EMTs, ‘When I the EMTs and four mem- told Barb our dinner was bers of the Hart Fire De- to die for, I wasn’t serious.’ partment arrived. It was By this time the reality one of those nights where of what had just occurred there were three other started to sink in. Barb emergencies going on in was afraid she’d done the the county at the same compressions wrong and time. Even though Tom wondered if she should was conscious, the EMTs have done something difwere insistent we needed ferently. The EMTs and to get him up and on the the staff at the hospital regurney because he would assured her saying, “Look probably have another ep- at him, he’s alive, you did isode. And sure enough, everything right!” two or three minutes later After Tom was stabihe flatlined. But this time lized in Shelby, he was he was hooked up. The taken to Grand Rapids for firemen who had been further evaluation and a on another emergency short hospital stay. “I had arrived next. Instead of what is called ventricular shocking him, because tachycardia. Basically my compressions had worked heart raced, and then it for me, they started do- stopped,” he said. “I asked ing compressions again. both my EMTs and my I calmly, but firmly, told Tom, ‘No, you’re not leaving me!’ I talked to him the whole time. I was blowing on his face, telling him to stay with me. I was positive we could do this. I told the EMTs, ‘We’re not going to lose Tom.’ I was a woman on a mission!” By then the neighborhood had gathered and Many West Michigan Fire Departments assembled in Walkerville to pay tribwanted to know how they ute to the late Jerry Frick last Sunday afternoon. Shelby and Pentwater ladder could help. Barb took trucks flew our beautiful flag in his honor. • Paul Erickson/Echo charge once again and said she’d be fine. She promised she would keep everyone posted and followed the ambulance to Trinity Health Shelby Hospital. “To be honest, I need-


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
The Oceana Echo - Volume 3, Issue 22, October 24, 2025 by theoceanaecho - Issuu