Sunderland Echo

Residents’ life-saving equipment

BIG LOTTERY FUND AWARDS TOWN GYM £1,500 TO BUY DEFIBRILLA­TOR

- By David Allison david.allison@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @davidallis­on88

Life-saving equipment will now be on hand for residents of a Wearside town thanks to a lottery grant.

The Big Lottery Fund, from the National Lottery, has awarded Houghton community gym Evolution Fitness a grant in order to expand its services to residents.

A total of £1,500 of the grant will be used to buy an AED (automated external defibrilla­tor), which will be housed outside the building in case it is ever needed, not just by service users, but also the wider community.

The purchase coincides with Restart a Heart Day, staged this week, and the equipment will be registered with the North East Ambulance Service for anyone locally calling 999 to report a heart attack.

Evolution Fitness managing director Michael Donkin said: “Getting funding from the National Lottery is a huge achievemen­t.

“It shows that the work we do as a community-interest company has been recognised.

“The AED we are purchasing will be wall mounted outside of our facility, meaning in the event of a cardiac emergency it will be available to the wider public even when we’re closed.

“This will be the only community-access defibrilla­tor in Houghton town centre and although we hope it’s never needed, early defibrilla­tion during a cardiac arrest can raise a person’s chances of survival from 6% to 70%, so it could literally be a lifesaver.”

While Evolution Fitness operates its main gym site in Newbottle Street, in Houghton, which is available to everyone, the lottery grant has given the company the ability to expanded its additional support of using fitness as a way of tackling obesity, sedentary lifestyle and mental health issues, such as depression.

The Big Lottery Fund is the largest funder of community activity in the UK and aims to help people improve their lives and communitie­s, often through small, local projects.

It is responsibl­e for giving out 40% of the money raised by National Lottery players for good causes.

Last year it awarded £583million and supported about 12,000 projects across for health, education, environmen­t and charitable purposes.

Since June 2004 it has awarded more than £8billion to projects that change the lives of millions of people.

 ??  ?? Paramedic Andy Thomas, left, and Michael Donkin, of Evolution Fitness.
Paramedic Andy Thomas, left, and Michael Donkin, of Evolution Fitness.

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