Bills’ Damar Hamlin back in Buffalo to continue recovery

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Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin was released from the University of Cincinnati Medical Center on Monday after spending almost a week in the hospital following suffering cardiac arrest on the field at Paycor Stadium.

The news was shared by Dr. William Knight IV and Dr. Timothy Pritts of UC Health on Monday.

Hamlin flew from Cincinnati to Buffalo on Monday and has been transferred to Buffalo General Medical Center, Hamlin said in a tweet. He will continue to receive treatment as he recovers there.

“Headed home to Buffalo today with a lot of love on my heart,” Hamlin tweeted Monday afternoon. “Watching the world come together around me on Sunday was truly an amazing feeling. The same love you all have shown me is the same love that I plan to put back into the world n more. Bigger than football!”

He has met a number of milestones on his journey to recovery, per doctors at UC Health, and has been up with physical and occupational therapy, walking the unit and tolerating a normal diet.

“Grateful for the awesome care I received at UCMC,” Hamlin also tweeted. “Happy to be back in Buffalo. The docs and nurses at Buffalo General have already made me feel at home!”

The team of doctors at UC Health continue to be “ecstatic’ about his recovery. He began walking with assistance on Friday. Hamlin remained in the hospital’s surgical intensive care unit until he was transferred as doctors wanted him to reach the criteria that allowed them to upgrade his condition from critical to either fair or good.

On Monday morning, he was able to meet those criteria and the doctors felt it was “safe and proper,” per Pritts, to get him back to Buffalo.

“In general, we want to ensure that each organ system is stable to improving and that he needs a minimum amount of assistance, such that he does not need intensive nursing,” Pritts said on the bar Hamlin needed to clear.

“And we have some awesome rock star nurses who’ve been with him from the beginning, but he no longer needs that level of nursing care. No longer needs intensive respiratory therapy from our respiratory care practitioners and is able to then, move to a setting where he would have less intensive care.”

Hamlin is expected to continue to undergo a series of tests and evaluations to determine what caused the incident, in addition to treating any pathology that may be found.

Hamlin was taken to the hospital in Cincinnati last Monday night after collapsing on the field and suffering cardiac arrest during a game between the Bills and the Bengals. The game was postponed and later cancelled.