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Man bitten by great white shark in California goes home

Great White Shark (FILE)
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PACIFIC GROVE, Calif. (AP) — A man who was bitten by a great white shark off the central California coast last month was released from the hospital on Wednesday.

Steve Bruemmer, 62, was released from Natividad Medical Center in Salinas, after undergoing three weeks of hospital care and rehabilitation three weeks after a shark bit him as he swam off Pacific Grove near Monterey, KSBY-TV reported.

Bruemmer was applauded by hospital workers as he left in a wheelchair, wearing a blue T-shirt emblazoned with the words: “Shark Attack Survivor.”

In a video supplied by the medical center and carried by KSBW-TV, Bruemmer said from a hospital bed that the shark bit him across his thighs and abdomen and then “it spit me out."

“I'm not a seal," said Bruemmer, a retired Monterey Peninsula College professor. “It took me for a seal. We're not their food."

“It was looking at me, right next to me," he said. “I thought it could bite me again so I pushed it with my hand and I kicked at it with my foot and it left."

The shark came within a millimeter of severing a major artery, Nicholas Rottler, a trauma surgeon at the medical center, told KSBW-TV a day after the June 22 attack.

However, no major damage was done to his bones or organs.

“It could’ve been much, much worse he could’ve not made it out of the water,” Rottler said.

After he cried out for help, Bruemmer said he was rescued by two standup paddleboarders — a nurse and a police officer — who came over and a surfer who took two boards from the beach to reach him.

“The three of them in the bloody water got me up onto the surfboard and pulled me into the beach" despite the possibility that the shark was still circling, Bruemmer said, calling them heroes.

Bruemmer said he was taken to a trauma center for surgery and received 28 units of blood. He thanked the medical workers and the blood donors for saving his life.

Police used an aerial drone to look for the shark but didn't spot it.

Shark attacks in California are rare. However, Tomas Butterfield, 42, of Sacramento was killed in a shark attack in Morro Bay in central California last Christmas Eve.

It was the only unprovoked fatal shark attack in the United States last year.

The area was sectioned off for beachgoers following the incident last month. Pacific Grove Police monitored the water using an aerial drone but the shark was not spotted.

Bruemmer is an experienced swimmer and Rottler said this helped in his recovery, “Being in really good physical condition before the shark bite definitely made his functional recovery easier. His upper body strength and cardiac endurance allowed him to improve faster than most patients.”

In a video released by Natividad Medical Center on Wednesday, Bruemmer continuously thanked the bystanders who helped him and the medical team for saving his life.

“Heroes. How do you get into the bloody water, with maybe a shark circling beneath you to save a stranger? They’re amazing."