Posts Tagged ‘surviving a heart attack’

Cardiac Arrest Survivor Program Launched

June 17th, 2010

We’ve made a lot of progress toward doing something about one of the biggest killers in the state and U.S.- cardiac arrest.  We’ve published peer-reviewed journal articles that demonstrate the superiority of the new hands-only CPR technique, implemented the new approach throughout the EMS community, made inroads with getting the public aware of the new technique, trained 911 dispatchers, put together a series of cardiac arrest care centers and made AED’s a lot more common in public buildings. But what about the people that survive a cardiac arrest (and their families)?  Up until now, there weren’t many resources to help them cope with life after a cardiac arrest, like dealing with their internal defibrillator and their families emotions.

Although surviving a cardiac arrest is cause for great celebration, survivors face concerns about their implanted defibrillator, guilt for the stress one’s family is experiencing and the need to process what has happened.  The fact that they were dead and are now alive can bring on some intense emotions.  That’s why we worked with the University of Arizona Sarver Heart Center to launch the SCA Foundation’s Arizona Affiliate of National Survivor Network™ this month.  We’re encouraging all AZ cardiac arrest survivors to register with the SCAF and share their stories.  They’ll be helping their families, other survivors, and themselves.  Arizona survivor stories can be found on the SCAF website  and the SHARE website.

Arizona Stroke Research

May 10th, 2010

Dr. Ben Bobrow, our EMS Medical Director is at it again, with yet another publication that positively measured the value and effectiveness of another public health intervention.  Ben and his team published this month in Stroke and demonstrated that telemedicine is incredibly valuable for saving lives in rural and remote communities, by giving rural and frontier health care providers critical access to specialists that can help the rural providers save lives- and quality of life.

The bottom line is that the rural provider needs good advice about whether to administer thrombolysis medication.  If given quickly and when appropriate, this kind of medicine can dramatically improve outcomes- but it requires very quick judgment and administration…  including deciding who needs it and who doesn’t.  making a bad call can be a real problem, and making a good call can save a life.  Good work Ben.