Overview
Nearly
350,000 people die of sudden cardiac arrest each year. Currently, the
chances of surviving sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) without the aid of an
automatic external defibrillator (AED) are one in twenty.
However, with an AED, chances of survival improve to one in three. The use of AEDs could save 100,000 lives per year!
What is SCA?
The
heart normally has a rhythmic beat which causes the blood to move in a
consistent, predictable way. When someone has an SCA event, the heart
begins to pump irregularly and ineffectively. This is called ventricular
fibrillation (VF). VF is not to be confused with the heart attack where
blood flow to the heart muscle is blocked. With VF, the blood stops
circulating adequately, breathing stops, and eventually the victim will
die.
Another SCA event is ventricular tachycardia (VT), when the
heart muscles start to “quiver” instead of working together to push
blood through the system.
CPR alone does not replace
defibrillation in an SCA incident. CPR can only assist the victim for a
short time until medical help arrives. However, medical assistance can
be many minutes away. According to the American Heart Association, the
chances of survival decrease 10 percent with each passing minute that
the heart beat is not returned to normal. Very few people have survived
SCA after 10 minutes with no medical treatment.
Unfortunately, we don’t know why SCAs occur, nor how to prevent them. We do know, however, how to fix them if they occur—AEDs.
What is an AED?
You’ve
seen full-sized defibrillators on television. When the doctor shouts
“Clear” and shocks the victim, they are using a defibrillator. The AED
works the same—it shocks the heart back into a normal rhythm to restore a
pulse.
Manufacturers have developed lighter, smaller, battery-operated, computer-controlled models which nearly anyone can use.
Signs and symptoms of SCA
Symptoms
of SCA are very sudden and dramatic. Typically, the victim will
collapse, and show no sign of a pulse. At this point, emergency medical
help must be summoned, and the AED used.
The victim’s chest is bared, all visible jewelry or medicine patches are removed, and the electrode pads are attached.
Once
the electrical pads are attached, the AED is turned on. Many AEDs will
prompt the operator through the necessary steps to use it. If the AED
does not sense a shockable event, no shock is given. Others will
function automatically, applying a shock to the victim after sounding a
warning alarm.
Laws and liability
In
May 2000, Congress passed the Cardiac Arrest Survival Act to establish a
national standard that provides Good Samaritan immunity for cardiac
arrest care providers, trainers, and owners of property where AEDs are
kept.
A legal trend is starting to appear which suggests that failing
to provide AEDs to respond to an SCA incident may be deemed as
negligent.
Training Tips
Review the employee handout, and the user’s guide which comes with the AED. Point out the location of AEDs in your facility.
Review
with the employees the signs and symptoms of sudden cardiac arrest and
heart attack. Explain that in either case, early contact with emergency
medical personnel is critical.
Explain how to summon emergency
medical help, and the identities of the emergency medical responders at
your facility. Explain to the participants how the company trains first
aid responders to use the AEDs.
Where To Go For More Information
29 CFR 1910.151—First Aid.
OSHA CPL 2-2.53—Guidelines for first aid programs.
AED User’s Guide
Cardiac Arrest Survival Act (CASA)
Airline Passenger Safety Act
Applicable state regulations
This information is provided by: MarshMcLennan Agency https://marshmmamidwest.com/
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