The park opened last year and attracts many visitors every day. No serious incidents have been reported so far. “Earlier this week, in the Decepticoaster roller coaster area (…), a visitor had a sudden emergency requiring medical help” said the park in a statement Friday night.
“We immediately take first aid measures, perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation, use an automated external defibrillator and take (the person) to the hospital” but this “ sad to die “ he detailed.
The statement did not specify the gender or age of the visitor. It also does not indicate whether the discomfort occurred before, during or after passing the attraction.
There’s really not much more information available. I heard about it when arriving at work this morning (this Sunday is a “substitute workday” to compensate for the upcoming Mayday holiday) when one of the Chinese teachers showed me the article.
That’s sad news. And this site says that the heart attack occurred actually while on the ride
But theme parks worldwide get about 200 million attendees a year, or did before COVID. People must die at one every day. There are warnings everywhere that rollers coasters can be dangerous. When a kid flew off a water slide, I could understand parents panicking. This? What does making this an international incident serve? People who are foolish enough to go on thrill rides if they have heart conditions won’t be deterred and it won’t mean anything to people who are unaware of bad hearts.
I don’t see where this has become an international incident, nor anyone trying to make this an international incident. It’s simply a report that someone had a heart attack and died while in a theme park.
Given the sheer numbers of people who visit theme parks, even if all of them were sitting quietly listening to soothing music there would still be the concessional death/hearth attack/medical emergency simply down to in any large group people will die due to various causes over any given time span.
I never said “international incident”. Currently Beijing is still operating under its “zero tolerance COVID restrictions”, so it’s a bit of surprise to me that the amusement park is even open. The school where I work had already made arrangements for the high school students to go to Universal a couple of weeks ago, but that outing was canceled “due to the COVID situation”.
Next, the resort opened up last year and, again, this is the first serious thing that’s happened there. It’s a new park. And, yes, it is kind of mundane for an amusement park to have somethign serious happen, but one that’s fairly new? That is news.
I had a scary “cardiac event” while on the Cyclone at Coney Island. I was in my 40s with no prior cardiac history. Though I felt like I was dying, nobody else cared.
I’ve watched many videos of the slingshot or vomitron ride that flings two people high in the sky where they spin until the ride settles down and it slowly descends to the ground.
Many of them pass out and get whiplashed all over the place but all remain alive. All ages too seen some tiny kids and very senior couples go on it it’s the first timers that scream bloody murder and pass out. They lose their wigs, their chains, their dignity and I’d place a bet that one or two get a ride to the hospital. But they wouldn’t show that video.
Yea, It doesn’t seem all that newsworthy to me. If someone told me the annual heart attack death rate on amusement park rides worldwide was about 3-5 I wouldn’t argue that.
I was more surprised no one started a thread on the Teen dies after fall from drop tower ride at Orlando's ICON PARK, authorities say Orlando drop tower ride death that happened last month. I had the unfortunate luck to see the uncut video on youtube the morning after before they quickly removed it. Absolutely horrible and completely avoidable.
Never happen. They throw the body overboard and claim they died in the ocean as a suicide. The body count on cruise ships make for a prima facie case than boarding one is an admission of intending to commit suicide, so no legal problems crop up.
I followed a bit of a rabbit hole on this, because I missed it last month when it happened. The sad thing is that 23 years ago almost the exact same thing happened to another kid, and no additional safety gear was installed then.
That poor kid. The story said he didn’t die until he was at the hospital. I hope he was unconscious.