The impossible happened again. Christian Eriksen, the Danish midfielder who collapsed on the pitch during Euro 2020, collapsed once more during a training session yesterday. And once more, a tiny subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (S-ICD) saved his life. The device, developed and refined with significant contributions from UK research institutions, delivered a precise electrical shock within seconds of detecting ventricular fibrillation, restoring a normal rhythm. Eriksen is now recovering in hospital, alert and stable. This is not just a miracle of modern medicine; it is a testament to the UK’s leadership in cardiac technology and a resounding validation of the S-ICD as a global gold standard.
Let me peel back the layers of this story. The S-ICD is a marvel of miniaturisation and intelligent algorithms. Unlike traditional pacemakers that thread wires into the heart, the S-ICD sits just under the skin, monitoring the heart’s rhythm wirelessly. When it detects a life-threatening arrhythmia, it delivers a shock that effectively resets the heart’s electrical system. It’s like a backup battery for your heart, but one that only kicks in when the main circuit blows. For athletes, whose hearts are put under extreme physical stress, this device is a literal lifesaver.
Eriksen’s first collapse in 2021 was a wake-up call for the entire sports world. The medical teams at the Euros were prepared, and his prompt resuscitation highlighted the importance of immediate defibrillation. But it was his subsequent implantation of an S-ICD that set a new benchmark. That device, developed through decades of collaboration between UK universities and the NHS, has been refined to reduce false alarms and improve battery life. Today’s event proves that the device works not just in controlled hospital settings, but in the chaotic real world of elite sport.
The UK’s role in this cannot be overstated. The National Institute for Health Research has funded trials that demonstrated the S-ICD’s superiority over traditional transvenous defibrillators in reducing infection and lead complications. British engineers at Cambridge and Imperial College London have pioneered the algorithms that make these devices smarter, able to differentiate between a harmless arrhythmia and a killer one. And the NHS has championed their adoption, making the UK one of the highest per capita users of S-ICDS globally. This is a triumph of public-private collaboration, of research translated into practice at scale.
Now, the ethical dimension. As a technology optimist who also worries about the Black Mirror possibilities, I see both promise and peril. On one hand, these devices are becoming so effective that they risk creating a class of ‘enhanced’ athletes, dependent on software updates for survival. How long before we see implanted defibrillators for healthy individuals as a precautionary measure? And who owns that data? The device logs every heartbeat, every shock. That is a goldmine for insurers, employers, even governments. We must ensure that cardiac technology remains a tool for saving lives, not for surveillance or discrimination.
But for now, let us celebrate. Christian Eriksen’s second chance is a story of resilience, of scientific progress, and of a system that works. It should make every patient and doctor confident that the UK standard of care is second to none. The data from this incident will now flow back into research, refining the next generation of devices. The cycle continues. And somewhere, an engineer is already thinking about how to make the device even smaller, smarter, and more humane. That’s the future we’re building. One heartbeat at a time.









