While expert medical care saved Teel, Dr. Singh says there was “definitely someone up above” playing a role. Had Teel not been in the LVH–Carbon ER when his heart stopped, this story may have had a different ending. Teel agrees.
Teel says when he asked in the ICU if he could ride his motorcycles again, Debbie knew he was going to be fine.
He says his care at LVHN was beyond his expectations. “I haven’t had a whole lot of interaction with hospitals,” he says. “From the moment I walked in the door at the ER until I left the Allentown campus, everyone was just rooting for me and taking good care of me. I wanted for nothing.”
Teel says a good friend of his stopped to see him after he got home and told him he was fortunate for three reasons: That he made it through, that he had Dr. Singh, and that he was cared for at the best hospital in the area.
Teel says 35 years ago, his uncle on his dad’s side, died from the same kind of heart attack. That uncle died on the way to the former Gnadden Huetten Memorial Hospital in Lehighton, he says. Teel says he coincidentally thought of his uncle not long before his own heart attack. “It might have been a precursor,” he mused.
Teel’s family was grateful for the excellent care he received. In a note to Dr. Singh, they wrote that “all the expertise and knowledge you had shown during his surgeries and procedures saved his life and gave him the best chance of a miraculous recovery.”
For now, Teel says because a stent was installed, he’s on medication to prevent his platelets from binding together and clotting. He takes medicine for blood pressure and cholesterol and attends cardiac rehabilitation through LVHN. After a huge health care bump in the road, life is nearly back to normal.
“Every day, I’m thankful to be here,” Teel says.