I shouted for her father, Chris, and dragged her out of bed, got her on the
floor and assumed she must have been choking on vomit, so started to try and
clear her airway and did the Heimlich manoeuvre. Nothing came up so we
started CPR. Chris went and got the mobile, dialled all the numbers we could
think of for emergencies (999, 111, etc) with no answers. We carried Hannah
out to the corridor and carried on with CPR whilst banging on all the
apartment doors so that someone would answer and could ring the emergency
services.
Eventually we got somebody and they dialled 112. As we were up the mountain
in February they were a long time coming. Chris and I carried on CPR,
moved Hannah out onto the balcony where it was colder as we believed she may
last longer without breathing the colder she was.
The
pompiers (firemen) then arrived with a paramedic and the local GP and then
more medics from the hospital in the valley. They tried to defibrillate her
and put drugs in to her but all to no avail. We think there were at least 10
men in our tiny apartment full of suitcases and our other 2 sleeping
children. Our daughter was certified dead on Saturday 17th
February 2007.
Her body came back to England a week later and Mary Sheppard carried out her
autopsy at The Brompton Hospital to find no reason for her death beyond a
sudden electrical imbalance causing ventricular arrhythmia. This can be
almost impossible to resuscitate and Hannah would have been blissfully
unaware of the proceedings.
Hannah had been an active 7 year old, going to Brownies, learning piano,
enjoying school, reading Roald Dahl, playing football and being part of the
Hannah, Lucy and Oliver team. She loved skiing and was good at it. She died
in a beautiful village up in the mountains having had a wonderful holiday
doing lots of wonderful things. We have many happy memories.
Ten months on and we have had a birthday for Lucy, got ourselves a beautiful
puppy, have plans for Christmas and are still surrounded by the loving
support of our family and friends.
We are truly grateful to CRY for being there and helping us to understand
that there are many families who suffer sudden deaths. We plan to raise more
money and improve awareness for CRY. This should help fund research to help
understand more about sudden deaths.