Akron General Medical Center To Oversee School Defibrillator Funding

AKRON, Ohio, Nov. 12 /PRNewswire/ -- Akron General Medical Center has been named the administering organization for the funds provided by the State of Ohio to supply automated external defibrillators (AEDs) to individual schools throughout the State. In June, Governor Bob Taft signed legislation that made available 2.5 million dollars generated from the tobacco settlement to fund the first step in an effort to provide AEDs for Ohio’s 5,000 public and private schools. By naming the Akron General Medical Center as the not-for- profit administering organization, the State has put into motion the initial phase of this very important program.

A plan will now be implemented allowing every Ohio school, public and private, to apply for an AED. “The State’s decision to award funding authority to Akron General confirms the leadership position of Akron General’s Heart and Vascular Center in cardiac and vascular medicine,” said Jon Trainor, president of the Akron General Development Foundation. “We are extremely pleased to see this program become a reality, knowing that it will ultimately save lives.”

Akron General cardiologist Terry Gordon, D.O., is a leading advocate for the program. His testimony before the state legislature was instrumental in helping procure funding. “Children are our most precious resource. There is no doubt that the placement of defibrillators in schools across the state will save lives,” said Dr. Gordon. “Our goal is to secure the additional funding needed to make certain that every school, public and private, has access to an AED.” It is estimated that a total of approximately 7.5 million dollars must be raised to fully implement the goal of placing an AED in every Ohio school.

Akron General’s placement program is highly developed and detailed, since providing schools with AEDs alone can result in tragic, unintended consequences arising from confusion at the school over what to do when an incident occurs. Training for a minimum of five people at each school is included. In addition, the distribution plan provides not only the actual training, but also the orchestration of the training process, the placement of the AEDs, the alignment with the local paramedic units, as well as the template for each school’s emergency response plan regarding cardiac arrest. This comprehensive effort will ensure schools have what they need to maintain a successful program.

Each day in the United States, more than 1,200 people die from cardiac arrest before they can be admitted to a hospital. Cardiac arrest, usually resulting from some form of underlying heart disease, is due to abnormal rhythms or arrhythmias. Ventricular fibrillation (VF) is the most common arrhythmia that causes cardiac arrest. VF is a condition in which the heart’s electrical impulses suddenly become chaotic, causing the heart’s pumping to abruptly stop. Death follows within minutes. Defibrillation is the only treatment for VF. This technique of giving an electrical shock can restore the heart’s normal rhythm if it is done within minutes of the cardiac arrest.

AEDs have made it possible for trained, as well as untrained, lay rescuers to deliver life-saving defibrillation shock to cardiac arrest victims. These small, portable devices administer an electric shock through the chest wall to the heart. A built-in computer assesses the patient’s heart rhythm, judges whether defibrillation is needed, and then administers the shock. Audible and/or visual prompts guide the user through the process. These shocks can convert ventricular fibrillation into a normal heart rhythm and save lives.

In the United States, the successful resuscitation from sudden cardiac arrest is a dismal 3-5%. In recent years, efforts to place AEDs in public spaces has led to a decrease in the incidence of death from cardiac arrests in the adult population from over one-half million Americans to approximately 300,000 per year.

Unfortunately, the percentage of death from cardiac arrest among our youth has increased by 10% over the past decade. Every year in America, thousands of children die from sudden cardiac arrest. And the magnitude of sudden cardiac arrest in young athletes may well be underestimated, as there is no suitable registry to follow this tragic occurrence.

Akron General’s partner in the AED program is Medtronic, a world leader in medical technology and the market leader in AEDs. Medtronic has been in the external defibrillation field since 1955. It currently has 450,000 units in operation worldwide, including 250,000+ automated external defibrillators. Medtronic offers proven community leadership, unparalleled experience, unequaled product quality and service.

Akron General Medical Center is a 511-bed, 26-bassinet, adult, tertiary- care, not-for-profit teaching hospital with regional referral centers in Cardiology, Cancer, Women’s Health and Orthopedics. It is staffed by more than 1,000 physicians, 3,400 healthcare professionals and support staff and 550 volunteers who serve a population of more than 1.2 million people throughout Northeast Ohio. Akron General Medical Center ranks among U.S. News and World Report’s “America’s Best Hospitals,” and Solucient’s “Top 100 Hospitals” in the nation. It has repeatedly been named “Akron’s Most Preferred Hospital for Overall Quality and Image” by National Research Corporation.

Akron General Medical Center

CONTACT: Jim Armstrong, +1-330-344-6083, or Joe Jerek, +1-330-344-6014,both of Akron General Medical Center