Windsor Star

Officials urge businesses to install defibrilla­tors amid mapping project

Windsor, Essex residents invited to help identify devices' locations across region

- JULIE KOTSIS jkotsis@postmedia.com twitter.com/kotsisstar

Emergency medical service officials are pushing for more automatic defibrilla­tors in local businesses and asking the public to help map the locations of the life-saving devices, allowing 911 dispatcher­s to alert callers to the nearest location in an emergency.

“We salute any employer who wants to go the extra mile to protect their staff and customers, and we will do what we can to assist them,” Essex-windsor EMS Chief Justin Lammers said during a recent news conference at Post Packaging in Lakeshore.

“Instances of cardiac arrest can happen anywhere at any time and we can all help each other by being better prepared.”

Lammers was there to award Post Packaging owner Paul Giberson a Cardiac Champion certificat­e for purchasing an automatic external defibrilla­tor (AED) for his workplace and arranging for training for some employees.

“The idea that for a small investment of money and time our business can be better equipped and trained to save just one life is the best return on investment decision I may make,” Giberson said.

“We plan to continue training as many team members as possible in the short term, which will not only help at our business location but wherever those individual­s are in the event of a cardiac emergency and an AED is present.”

An AED is a sophistica­ted but easy-to-use electronic device that can restart a person's heart.

Survival rates after instances of sudden cardiac arrest improve dramatical­ly if a shock from a defibrilla­tor is received within three minutes of collapse and decrease every minute after that, Lammers said.

He added the majority of cardiac arrests that local paramedics respond to occur in private residences, but emergencie­s do strike in public areas and access to public access defibrilla­tors (PADS) could save lives.

According to Lammers, bystander CPR was conducted on 161 occasions in 2023, but a PAD was only used in 11 of those cases.

Officials are asking Windsor and Essex County residents to participat­e in “mapping ” all defibrilla­tors across the region by using a smartphone app called Pulsepoint.

This is ahead of Ontario's Bill 141 that will require all PADS to be mapped and maintained.

There are about 560 defibrilla­tors locally that have been registered.

“Defibrilla­tors are easy to use and each and every one of us can be a lifesaver if we can quickly access a defibrilla­tor when someone suffers an instance of sudden cardiac arrest,” said Essex County Warden Hilda Macdonald. “All of us have the ability to save a life. The key is ensuring all our public access defibrilla­tors are mapped and registered, and we are calling on the residents of Windsor-essex to help us achieve this life-saving goal.”

People who download the free app can upload the location of public defibrilla­tors from their mobile devices. The uploads are then authentica­ted by Pulsepoint and shared with the Windsor Central Ambulance Communicat­ions Centre.

For further informatio­n, visit countyofes­sex.ca/aed or email defib@countyofes­sex.ca.

 ?? ?? Access to defibrilla­tors can dramatical­ly improve the chances of a person surviving a cardiac arrest, Essex-windsor EMS Chief Justin Lammers says.
Access to defibrilla­tors can dramatical­ly improve the chances of a person surviving a cardiac arrest, Essex-windsor EMS Chief Justin Lammers says.

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