Date: Fri 20-Dec-1996
Date: Fri 20-Dec-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
health-defibrillators-heart
Full Text:
Health w/photos : Emergency Services Work To Speed Aid To Heart Attack Victims
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
It's 3 am. The caller, who lives on Maltbie Road, is frantic. Her husband got
out of bed and collapsed, an apparent heart attack victim.
It's 5:30 pm, the height of rush hour, when a 911 call alerts the emergency
dispatch center in Edmond Town Hall that a woman on Great Quarter Road is
feeling faint and having difficulty breathing.
The question in the minds of both victims' families is the same: How soon will
the ambulance arrive?
Timing is crucial, particularly in cardiac cases. If there is no pulse and and
the victim has stopped breathing, brain damage occurs within four to six
minutes unless CPR (cardio-pulmonary resuscitation) is started immediately.
"You have 10 minutes to get a defibrillator there," said Scott Arnold,
emergency medical services coordinator at Danbury Hospital. "After 10 minutes,
there is less than one percent odds the victim will survive. But if CPR
(cardio-pulmonary resuscitation) is started, and the defibrillator gets there
within 10 minutes, the survival odds increase to 40 percent."
In an effort to reduce response time, the Newtown Volunteer Ambulance Corps
and the town's five volunteer fire companies are joining forces to work
together in what could be a major change in the way that emergency medical
services are delivered. Volunteer firefighters from each of the companies
recently completed training as MRT's (medical response technicians) and have
been trained to use defibrillators, receiving dual certification.
"It's a major move - one that is very exciting," said Debbie Aubin, an
ambulance corps member who helped coordinate the training program. "The hope
is that each fire company eventually will have a defibrillator and also could
be a first responder."
In a town the size of Newtown, with the ambulance garage located on Mt
Pleasant Road and residents spread over 60 square miles, getting assistance to
victims quickly is a challenge that has required creative solutions.
"In Newtown, the entire ambulance corps is a first responder which means that
we send our EMT's directly to the scene while one of our members goes to pick
up the ambulance," said Ambulance Corps Chief Steve Rambone. "This way we can
get someone to the scene much more quickly and help can begin before the
ambulance gets there."
But the number of calls is steadily increasing while the corps membership
hasn't grown significantly over the past 20 years.
"We had 40 members and 500 calls in 1975," Chief Rambone said. "We're now
handling 1,200 calls a year with 48 members, and eight or nine of them are
trainees. In fact, our call volume is greater than all five fire companies
together."
As part of a continuing study, Chief Rambone made a pin map to locate the
sources of the calls with the idea that it might be helpful to house an
ambulance in another part of town.
"That's still a long-term possibility, particularly since parts of the town
are growing by leaps and bounds," he said. "But right now we would like to get
a few more defibrillators - we have one for each of the (three) ambulances -
to distribute directly to first responders in each part of town."
In July, three of the fire companies began to respond immediately, along with
the ambulance corps, to all motor vehicle accidents on I-84. It was about this
time that the corps learned that William Halstead, chief of the Sandy Hook
Volunteer Fire and Rescue Company, had been talking to emergency medical
services personnel at Danbury Hospital about getting MRT and defibrillator
certification for the members of his company.
"I think the ambulance people do an unbelievable job but we wanted to be
trained in case one of our (firefighters) got hurt - and we wanted to be able
to do more at motor vehicle accidents," Chief Halstead explained. "In the
past, our role generally has been limited to providing lifting assistance for
the ambulance (corps), helping at an MVA or driving the medic vehicle. By law,
we weren't able to help (a victim) at an MVA, we could only do an extrication.
With certification, we'd be able to start earlier or assist."
Working with Danbury Hospital and the American Red Cross, ambulance corps
members set up a 45-hour MRT training course for the firefighters and a
two-night defibrillator class. Natalie Dos Santos and Debbie Aubin, along with
Scott Arnold as lead instructor, conducted the Red Cross/MRT classes, which
met two evenings each week for 10 weeks, while Chris D'Esposito provided
training in the use of the defibrillators.
Approximately 20 firefighters, representing all five of the town's fire
companies, participated. There were 12 from Sandy Hook alone.
Debbie Aubin said that since the fire companies already are located in each
section of town, it would make sense to equip each with a defibrillator. But
before the firefighters also can serve as first responders, many legalities
must be worked out.
"We plan to have a meeting, sometime in January, at which representatives of
Danbury Hospital, the ambulance association, all five fire chiefs and maybe
representatives of the town government will all sit down to work out the
legalities and the liabilities," Scott Arnold said. "We have to determine how
it will work, decide who's responsible for what. Protocols and procedures have
to be written. And an application has to be filed with the state because under
the existing state regulations, Newtown ambulance is the (only) authorized
first responder."
The defibrillators, which range in cost from approximately $3,500 to $8,000,
are easy to learn to use. The newest computerized versions do all of the work,
determining whether victim's heart needs to be shocked to have a normal
heartbeat restored, and applying that shock as needed.
"Just like citizen CPR, all you need is to check for pulse and put the
(defibrillator) pads on the right place. It's not rocket science," Mr Arnold
said. "Already airlines are putting them on planes and they are being placed
in skyscrapers and shopping malls."
But timing is crucial - it's the foundation of the "chain of survival," Chris
D'Esposito said.
"Timing starts when the medical emergency occurs, not when someone calls 911.
You need a bystander or first responder to start CPR, then early
defibrillation," he said. From that point, medications and continual
reassessment of the patient's condition - all part of ALS (advanced life
service) - are needed until the ambulance reaches the hospital.
Many of the emergency services personnel in Newtown foresee a day when the
police also might be trained as first responders.
In some larger cities, such as Bristol, where Newtown Police Chief James
Lysaght previously worked, police officers are certfied as MRTs. In some
states they even have defibrillators in their cruisers.
"I see excellent cooperation between the emergency services in Newtown and
this training could make it even easier for us to work together," Chief
Lysaght said.
The chief said that when Newtown's police officers come out of the police
academy, they are certified in CPR and as MRT's. But they haven't been able to
maintain their certifications because the costs of this ongoing training
hasn't been part of the department's budget.
"I believe my officers would jump at the chance to have this training," he
said. "I think it's an importance part of police service and would be a
logical progession of delivering emergency services to the community."
