Developer of Heimlich maneuver dead at 96

Dr. Henry Heimlich holds his memoir prior to being interviewed at his home in Cincinnati in 2014. Heimlich, the surgeon who created the life-saving Heimlich maneuver for choking victims died on Saturday, Dec. 17, 2016, at Christ Hospital in Cincinnati. He was 96. File photo: Al Behrman/AP

Dr. Henry Heimlich holds his memoir prior to being interviewed at his home in Cincinnati in 2014. Heimlich, the surgeon who created the life-saving Heimlich maneuver for choking victims died on Saturday, Dec. 17, 2016, at Christ Hospital in Cincinnati. He was 96. File photo: Al Behrman/AP

Published Jan 12, 2017

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Henry Heimlich, the medical maverick who

came up with a maneuver credited with saving thousands of

choking victims but who damaged his standing as a proponent of

the curative powers of malaria, died on Saturday at the age of

96.

Heimlich, a doctor who developed a life-saving technique to

dislodge airway blockages, died at Christ Hospital in Cincinnati

of complications from a massive heart attack he suffered on

Monday, his family said in a statement.

A thoracic surgeon who often feuded with the established

medical community, Heimlich said the maneuver which was named

after him saved more than 100 000 lives. He claimed to have used

it himself last May on another resident of the Cincinnati

retirement home where he lived.

"It made me appreciate how wonderful it has been to be able

to save all those lives," he once told the Cincinnati Enquirer.

Heimlich came up with the ground-breaking technique in 1974

after reading about the high rate of deaths in restaurants that

first were attributed to heart attacks, but later found to have

been caused by diners choking on food.

An ordinary person could be a hero with "the Heimlich

Maneuver" - it requires no equipment, no great strength and only

minimal training.

The popular wisdom at the time called for repeatedly

slapping the back of person struggling with an obstruction of

the passage to the lungs.

But Heimlich, who was then at Jewish Hospital in Cincinnati,

believed the back slaps could force the blockage deeper. To

prove his method, he took anesthetized lab dogs, blocked their

windpipes with hunks of meat attached to strings in case of

emergency and developed a technique that would send his name

around the world.

The Heimlich Maneuver called for the rescuer to stand behind

the choking victim, apply the thumb-side of a fist to a spot

just under the diaphragm and between the lungs. By pushing

sharply on that spot, a surge of air from the lungs would then

expel the blockage.

"Dad was a hero to many people around the world for a simple

reason: He helped save untold numbers of lives through the

innovation of common-sense procedures and devices," his family

said in the statement. "But he was not only a physician and

medical inventor, he was also a humanitarian and a loving and

devoted son, husband, father and grandfather."

Heimlich wrote about his discovery for a medical journal and

it began to spread due to media coverage. A man in Washington

state who came to a neighbor's rescue was credited with being

the first person to use the Heimlich Maneuver shortly after

reading a newspaper story about it. The charismatic doctor also

busily promoted the technique, including appearances on

late-night television talk shows with Johnny Carson and David

Letterman.

Heimlich collected anecdotes about Heimlich rescues

throughout his life. Among them were the aide who saved Ronald

Reagan during his 1976 presidential campaign and Tom Brokaw

coming to the aid of fellow NBC newsman John Chancellor.

Actress Cher was saved by director Robert Altman and Clint

Eastwood once prevented a partygoer from choking. In 2015, a

13-year-old boy was able to clear a classmate's blockage after

learning the move watching the cartoon "SpongeBob SquarePants."

'ONLY METHOD'

Some members of the medical community had been slow to

accept the Heimlich Maneuver, partly because there had been no

official human trials, but in 1976 the Red Cross included it in

guidelines for clearing obstructed air passages.

In 1984, Heimlich was given the prestigious Lasker Award for

public service. A year later C. Everett Koop, then the U.S.

surgeon general, said the Heimlich method should be "the only

method" used for choking victims.

In 1986, it was officially recommended as the primary

anti-choking technique by the Red Cross, although the

organization would reverse that decision in 2006, saying

"abdominal thrusts" should only be a secondary method.

As the Heimlich Maneuver became part of American culture,

its namesake sought more innovation. He thought his technique

should also be used to clear mucus from the lungs during an

asthma attack and was better than cardiopulmonary resuscitation

for drowning victims - claims that were dismissed by authorities

such as the Red Cross and the American Medical Association.

Heimlich damaged his credibility further by espousing

malaria therapy, saying the high fevers of malaria stimulated

the body's immune system enough to counter AIDS, cancer and Lyme

disease.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

discounted that theory, but under Heimlich's direction, human

malaria therapy trials were conducted in Mexico, China and

Africa because they would never have been permitted in the

United States.

"I don't follow all the rules if there's a better, faster

way to do it," he told the Los Angeles Times in a 1994

interview. "If your peers understand what you've done, you are

not being creative."

His fiercest critic turned out to be son Peter, who had once

played in a band called Choke and done the music for Heimlich's

promotional film. The son devoted himself to debunking

Heimlich's work - first in a pseudonymous blog - and denounced

him as the creator of "a remarkable unseen history of fraud."

Heimlich's work with malarial therapy to fight AIDS was

briefly a popular cause in the mid-1990s, especially in

Hollywood, where celebrities hosted fundraisers for his research

and donors included Jack Nicholson, Bob Hope and Ron Howard.

Dr. Edward Patrick, a longtime collaborator who died in

2009, issued a press release in 2003 saying he was the

co-developer of the Heimlich Maneuver.

Heimlich also was credited with inventing a valve that bears

his name and is used to prevent air from filling the chest

cavity in trauma cases.

Heimlich and Jane Murray, daughter of dance school magnate

Arthur Murray and a proponent of alternative medical methods,

were married from 1951 until her death in 2012. They had four

children. 

Reuters

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