A recent article in The Boca Raton News makes the following important points about improving the odds of survival for athletes who experience sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) by having Automatic External Defibrillators (AEDs) at every athletic event:
"A million things can occur to delay 911 responses, such as traffic and remote locations that make it impossible for a paramedic to get to a victim on time," says Dave Magruder, a former firefighter and paramedic who now trains coaches on using AEDs.
"And for every minute a person experiences SCA without defibrillation, his or her survival rate drops by 7 to 10 percent," he said.
Too often, Magruder says, AEDs have been placed in an inaccessible location such as a box in the Principal's office.
"The AED device is a great invention, but the problem is that it is not always made accessible to coaches," said Brew Schumer, a middle school PE teacher.
Schumer hopes the new AEDs going into the county schools will be placed next to fire extinguishers in all areas of the school.
"Having an AED in all schools not only protects athletes on our campus, but it can also save their life on other campuses when they are traveling for away games," says high school soccer coach, Rob Sweeten, who was instrumental in getting two donated AEDs placed at Boca Raton High School after a 17-year old soccer player died of SCA from a congenital heart defect warming up on the field before a game.
"The possibility of saving lives will overcome teachers' or coaches' fears of using an AED to defibrillate their student," said Sweeten.