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Lives are
saved when defibrillators are placed in
large public spaces
Newswise — Heart experts at Johns Hopkins
and elsewhere have evidence that at least
522 lives can be saved annually in the
United States and Canada by the widespread
placement of automated external
defibrillators, the paddle-fitted,
electrical devices used to shock and revive
people whose hearts have suddenly stopped
beating.
Their latest findings support broad
deployment of battery-powered
defibrillators, known as AEDs for short, in
public spaces where large gatherings occur,
such as senior care facilities, hospitals,
sports stadiums, community centers, shopping
malls, airports, and the lobbies of large
hotels and office buildings.
The team’s study results, to be presented
Nov. 5 at the American Heart Association’s
annual Scientific Sessions in Orlando, Fla ,
are among the first conclusions to emerge
from a landmark series of studies, known as
the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium,
designed to reveal the best life-saving
techniques for cardiac emergencies.
Every year, experts say, more than 300,000
Americans of all ages die from sudden
cardiac death. A good many of them are
seniors.
In the latest work, researchers found – in
real-life, emergency situations – that use
of the laptop-size devices by random
bystanders more than doubled survival rates
among victims felled by a sudden heart
stoppage due to a heart attack or errant
heart rhythm. Each device, which costs, on
average, more than $2,000, is equipped with
a digital instruction screen that provides
simple, step-by-step directions.
“Our results were emphatically clear,” says
principal investigator, Myron “Mike” L.
Weisfeldt, M.D., a cardiologist at The Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine. “Good
Samaritans, when given access to automated
defibrillators in potentially fatal
emergencies, save lives.
“This is a serious matter of public health
policy and similar to previous discussions
about placing fire extinguishers near
building exits, wearing seat belts while
driving, or manufacturing cars with
airbags,” says Weisfeldt, the William Osler
Professor of Medicine at Hopkins and past
president of the American Heart Association
(AHA).
Previous research has shown that time is
critical in saving the majority of people
from sudden cardiac death. Care must be
provided as rapidly as possible, he says,
within five minutes of the heart attack, and
must employ the physical chest compressions
that are part of cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR), and, if needed, a
defibrillator.
Currently, Weisfeldt says, AEDs are used
mostly by paramedics and other emergency
medical workers who have additional training
in CPR. But often, he notes, bystanders
first on the scene of an emergency are
available to provide life-saving aid before
ambulances can arrive.
As part of the study, conducted in 11 major
cities in the United States and Canada from
December 2005 through November 2006,
researchers closely monitored the
circumstances surrounding nearly 10,000
incidents of cardiac arrest called into 911
emergency telephone lines. Pulled from each
medical file were details about use of CPR
and a defibrillator.
Overall results showed that 7 percent of
patients returned home after a hospital
stay. One hundred and forty-nine received a
shock from an AED used by a bystander. This
amounted to a survival rate of 36 percent
among these patients.
Among the bystanders who rushed to help,
some were nearby police (23 percent), or
health care workers (42 percent). Locations
varied from sports stadiums to indoor
lobbies and seniors’ housing complexes.
If results from the original study
population of 20 million are extrapolated to
the general population of the United States
and Canada (roughly 360 million), an
estimated 522 lives are saved.
“This research is the closest thing to the
real-world experience of life-threatening,
sudden cardiac death that we have,” says
Weisfeldt. He plans to educate Maryland
state officials on the benefits of increased
public access to AEDs. “Government,
community and business leaders need to
carefully consider increased access to
automated external defibrillators when
making healthy public policy.”
The state of Maryland made the devices
mandatory on-site equipment, in 2006, for
all public sports games.
At The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Weisfeldt
notes, the surprise death of a colleague in
2003 propelled hospital staff to place 23
AEDs in heavily trafficked spaces and
corridors. Across town at the University’s
Homewood campus, more than 100 of the
devices have been placed.
The study, set to continue through 2010, was
funded by the U.S. National Heart and Lung
and Blood Institute, a member of the
National Institutes of Health.
Other researchers involved in this study
were Tom Terndrup, M.D., at the University
of Alabama in Birmingham; Ahamed Idris,
M.D., at the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas;
Richard Kerber, M.D., at the University of
Iowa Carver College of Medicine in Iowa
City; Tom Aufderheide, M.D., at the Medical
College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee; Ian
Stiell, M.D., at the University of Ottawa in
Ontario, Canada; Jim Christenson, M.D., at
the University of British Columbia in
Vancouver, Canada; Cliff Callaway, M.D.,
Ph.D., at the University of Pittsburgh
Medical Center; Jerris Hedges, M.D., M.S.,
at Oregon Health & Science University in
Portland; David Hoyt, M.D., at the
University of California, San Diego; Peter
Kudenchuk, M.D., at the University of
Washington in Seattle; and Arthur Slutsky,
M.D.; Laurie Morrison, M.D.; and Paul
Dorian, M.D., at the University of Toronto
in Ontario, Canada.
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