This Doctor Is Trying To Stop Heart Attacks In Their Tracks
(by Arun Rath for NPR)
When Harry Selker was working as a cardiologist in the 1970s, clot-busting drugs were showing great promise against heart attacks. But their life-saving properties were very time sensitive. “If you give it within the first hour it has a 47 percent reduction of mortality; if you wait another hour, it has a 28 percent reduction; another hour, 23 percent. And people were taking about 90 minutes to make that decision,” he recalls. “So they were losing the opportunity to save patients’ lives.” Continue reading article here…..
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