77-year-old UBC student thanks classmates who performed CPR for 20 minutes after heart attack
Murray Forbes, 77, finally got to thank his UBC Okanagan saviours in person
A senior University of British Columbia student is thanking several classmates for saving his life four months after students at the school's Kelowna campus gave him cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) for at least 20 minutes.
Murray Forbes, a 77-year-old engineering student at UBC Okanagan, suffered a heart attack on his way to class in February.
"I turned into a very populated part of the campus and collapsed," he told CBC News, "I have no recollection of that except that's where I was found."
He survived thanks to three fast-acting fellow students who found him soon after he fell and gave him CPR.
This week, he finally found his chance to thank his Okanagan campus rescuers directly, as well as the campus security officer who raced to the scene with a defibrillator.
"Obviously, I was very grateful and wanted to say thank you," Forbes said in a phone interview.
Classmate kicked in to help
The students were members of the school's volunteer Emergency First Responder Team; according to a statement from UBC on Thursday,
One of those first on scene in February was first-year student Marissa Burfield.
"I could see people standing around a man lying on the ground," she said in a statement released by UBC. "I couldn't really believe it was happening; it was a bit of a shock.
"But my muscle memory kicked in. You can train so much, but once you're in a situation, you don't think — you just move."
Three years ago, Forbes was featured in a CBC News story about being the university's oldest student at the time.
"I enjoy it," he said in a 2019 interview. "I'm in good health, and I would probably shrivel up and die if I didn't have something worthwhile to do."
And though his heart attack this year forced him to drop two courses, he completed his third. Despite the setback, he said he plans to retake the missed classes next term.