The death of a young New Zealand accountant during a running race in Singapore has been described by a coroner as a "sad misadventure'' and prompted calls for more resuscitation devices at sporting events.
Simon Brinsley Gould, 29, had just returned from a two-week work trip to London and Oslo, when he took part in a 10.5km race on March 6 this year, The Strait Times has reported.
An inquest into his death heard that Gould had not been "properly acclimatised to the local climate and high humidity", and had not run for three weeks before the race, the paper reports.
At the 9km mark, Gould who is originally from Auckland, collapsed.
He was taken by stretcher to a private ambulance some 600m to 1km away but it was one of three not equipped with an automated external defibrillator (AED) which can restart a heart that has stopped beating.