19 hospitalized at Ed Sheeran concert

An Ed Sheeran concert Saturday struck a sour note when 19 people were hospitalized, including two for sudden cardiac arrests.

51,000 fans packed into a Pittsburgh stadium to see the “Shape of You” hitmaker, and emergency services were called 37 times. 

One of the stadium employees suffered a sudden cardiac arrest while taking down the set, and a paramedic suffered the same while leaving the venue. The 17 other hospitalizations, according to the Irish Times, were for “heat-related issues, some falls, and one seizure”.

Doctors have been struggling to discover the cause of an alarming increase in cardiac arrests over the last two years, particularly among healthy people.

In a recent study published in Physics in Fluids, Indian researchers suggested that strenuous exercise may be causing “the apparent mystery of sudden massive cardiac arrests of otherwise asymptomatic individuals working out in the gymnasium that keeps on killing human lives with no apparent rationalizing explanation.”

But it has also been suggested that too little exercise is a possible cause for recent sudden cardiac arrests and strokes in young, healthy people. Other culprits include the sound of an airplane overhead, shoveling snow, skipping breakfast, postal codes, paychecks, parents, “climate change,” loneliness, sleeping positions, soil, and others.

While an MIT study last year found the recent outbreak to be correlated to the COVID-19 vaccines, they have not been put forth by any media outlets as a possible cause.

Medical “experts” and media operatives have been using the term Sudden Adult Death Syndrome (SADS), to explain a recent spate of sudden deaths which occur most commonly in people under 40 and usually are due to cardiac arrest. 

“Healthy young people are dying suddenly and unexpectedly from a mysterious syndrome - as doctors seek answers through a new national register,” wrote the Daily Mail.  

The British Heart Foundation defines SADS as “when someone dies suddenly and unexpectedly from a cardiac arrest, but the cause of the cardiac arrest can’t be found.”

In March, for example, the cause of death for a young flight attendant who died suddenly shortly after landing was determined by the coroner to be Sudden Adult Death Syndrome (SADS). Greta Dyrmishi, 24, was working as a cabin crew member for an Air Albania flight from Tirana to Essex, UK on December 21st. As the plane landed at Stansted Airport, Dyrmishi suddenly fainted. Paramedics were unable to revive her, and ten minutes later she lost her pulse. She was pronounced dead at the scene. Essex Coroner Michelle Brown revealed the cause to be “sudden adult death syndrome (SADS)”.