11/13/2003
Shepherd
School to receive defibrillator unit any day now
BY LINDSEY FIELDER
Rice News Staff
The Shepherd
School of Music will soon become the third location on the
Rice campus to have installed a potentially life-saving
tool: an automated external defibrillator (AED).
Rice Emergency
Medical Services (REMS) Director Steve Reiter said, We
have the unit in our possession. Its just a matter
of putting it in (at the Shepherd School).
The Shepherd
School, a venue that draws thousands each year to attend
performances, will receive an AED exactly like the defibrillators
already located at Autry Court and the Facilities and Engineering
Building.
Reiter said the
placement of AEDs at Rice is a direct result of a safety
survey conducted by Medtronic, the company that installs
the defibrillators. The company looked at the entire campus
to identify high-attendance areas and their ease of accessibility.
REMS is currently
pursuing the possibility of also installing defibrillators
at the Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Management Building
and at Rice Stadium. Reiter said they are in the process
of finding the optimum location in both areas.
Each public access
defibrillator (PAD), the unit that actually contains the
AED, is wired to dispatch REMS when opened. The person at
the site can turn on the machine and receive instructions
on a digital display screen with an audio recording. An
emergency medical technician (EMT) will be en route to the
site to provide more advanced care and take the victim to
the hospital.
Each Rice department
or school in which a PAD site is located pays for its own
defibrillator, Reiter said, but REMS maintains the PADs
with monthly checkups.
According to
a report by REMS, with each passing minute of cardiac arrest,
a persons chance of survival decreases by 10 percent.
Defibrillators actually deliver an electric shock to a pulse-less
persons heart, resetting the electronic pulses. When
followed by early advanced care from an EMT, defibrillation
can be a life-saver.
Recommendations
from groups such as the American Heart Association are making
defibrillation accessible to the general public.
Education
in the community has taught us earlier access to defibrillators
is the most important component to saving [people in cardiac
arrest], Reiter said.