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Not long ago, a man in his 60s suddenly collapsed from a cardiac arrest while walking down the street.



This is UBC reporter Bae Yoon-ju.



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A man who was going up a hill steps backwards and falls to the asphalt floor.



Pedestrians gather, and a passenger in a black box vehicle runs to the man.



Drivers who follow immediately, surgeons at Ulsan University Hospital after work.



Doctors took turns performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation for five minutes here, and the collapsed man regained consciousness before 911 arrived.



A man in his 60s, who collapsed from a cardiac arrest, underwent surgery and recovered his health.



They say that in moments of urgency, his body moved before his head.



[Park Dong-jin / Professor of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Ulsan University Hospital: We are actually trained people, so when we see such a patient, we reflexively perform CPR.

When I woke up, I was personally doing CPR.]



[Jinah Kwon/Professor of Ulsan University Hospital Breast Surgery: Because I had to put all my weight to make the patient's heart beat.

We took turns performing the procedure for about 2 minutes, and the rest of those who did not perform CPR played the role of opening the airway.]



They emphasized that the role of citizens who did not pass by the fallen passerby and participated in the help was also important.



[Kwon Jin-ah / Professor of Breast Surgery at Ulsan University Hospital: I thought I could go on my way or something like this, but the citizens around me reported it and controlled the road.

Everyone tried to help.] Just in time, I



met a CPR specialist and a warm neighbor, and miraculously got a new life.



(Video coverage: Kim Young-kwan UBC, screen provided: Ulsan University Hospital)