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    NEVADA PROJECT HEARTBEAT LAUNCHED TO MAKE CARDIAC SCIENCE DEFIBRILLATORS PUBLICLY AVAILABLE ACROSS NEVADA
    23. April 2007 @ 12:50
    [b][/b]NEVADA PROJECT HEARTBEAT LAUNCHED TO MAKE CARDIAC SCIENCE DEFIBRILLATORS PUBLICLY AVAILABLE ACROSS NEVADA

    First Statewide Public Access Defibrillation Program in the U.S. Aims to Improve Sudden Cardiac Arrest Survivability
    RENO, NV and BOTHELL, WA – April 20, 2007 -- Leading local health organizations in the State of Nevada partnered today along with Cardiac Science Corporation [NASDAQ: CSCX], a global leader in advanced cardiac monitoring and defibrillation products, to announce the formation of Nevada Project Heartbeat, the first state-wide Public Access Defibrillation (PAD) program in the United States.

    Nevada Project Heartbeat’s goal is to improve Sudden Cardiac Arrest (SCA) survivability in the State of Nevada. It aims to accomplish this goal by raising the average citizen’s awareness of SCA, and by providing places of business, public agencies, and other organizations with the tools and training needed to make Automated External Defibrillators (AEDs) available, accessible, and affordable.

    The key to surviving sudden cardiac arrest is the speed with which cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) with defibrillation can be delivered. In addition to CPR, most cardiac arrest victims need an immediate defibrillation to restore the heart’s normal rhythm. If a victim receives defibrillation within one minute of the SCA, there is a 90% chance of resuscitation. If a victim must wait ten minutes for defibrillation, the chance of survival drops to less than 5%.

    “We want to make widely available the tools and training that will strengthen the average citizen’s role as the first responder in a cardiac emergency,” said Fergus Laughridge, Program Manager for Emergency Medical Services at the Nevada State Health Division. “If every citizen knows how to recognize the early signs of Sudden Cardiac Arrest, activate the emergency response system, and use an AED, then we can significantly improve the likelihood of surviving a SCA in Nevada, whether it occurs in Reno, Las Vegas or points in between, like Gabbs, population 318.”

    “The AHA recognizes four links in the chain of survival. Early detection, early CPR, early defibrillation, and early advanced care,” said J.W. Hodge, Public Education Manager at Reno-based Regional Emergency Medical Services Authority (REMSA). “With more AEDs in the community, trained citizens become part of the emergency response system, increasing the likelihood that the four links can quickly and properly work together to save a life.”

    Nevada Project Heartbeat is sponsored by a partnership of local Nevada healthcare organizations that had previously facilitated the deployment of more than 500 AEDs in their own communities across the State. The partners include REMSA, which will provide CPR and AED training in accordance with the latest American Heart Association guidelines and medical oversight for participating AED sites in urban areas; the Nevada State Health Division, Emergency Medical Services, which will set and maintain the training standards for CPR with an AED; the University of Nevada School of Medicine, Center for Education and Health Services Outreach and Office of Rural Health, which has deployed AEDs in Nevada with federal grants for AED deployment in rural areas; and Humboldt County General Hospital, which will train and oversee participating rural sites. Humboldt General has administered its own rural PAD program since 2005.

    “Our hope is that Humboldt County’s PAD program will be a model for other rural communities in Nevada,” said Pat Songer, Emergency Response Services Coordinator at Humboldt County General Hospital. “When more victims of SCA arrive at the hospital alive, treatment and rehabilitation can restore heart health. The recent saves in Humboldt County that occurred with previously deployed AEDs prove that this model works, and we are excited to bring it to the rest of the State.”

    Cardiac Science Corporation has been selected as the program’s preferred manufacturer. The Company will provide the program with Powerheart® brand AEDs, and the partnership will use Cardiac Science’s MasterTrak™ software to manage the Powerheart AEDs that are deployed across the state.

    In practical terms, Nevada Project Heartbeat will help a variety organizations such as fire and EMS departments, educational institutions, places of business, and healthcare and municipal facilities to set up and operate their own, localized PAD programs wherever the public may congregate. Nevada Project Heartbeat will provide participating organizations with access to the following services:

    �� Preferred pricing for AEDs through Cardiac Science;
    �� Medical oversight, including physician validation of training, standards, and procedures;
    �� Training in CPR with AED;
    �� Program Maintenance, including record keeping and data collection;
    �� Consulting on site selection and deployment;
    �� Incident management;
    �� Protection against loss, damage or liability associated with an AED deployment.

    “Cardiac Science has worked closely with community-based organizations to supply and service PAD programs in cities across the country, and is an expert in supporting the creation of Heartsafe environments,” said Mike Brode, Cardiac Science’s Director of Strategic Business. “To roll out such a program on a state-wide basis takes exceptional vision and a finely tuned organization. The Nevada team has assembled an impressive infrastructure and their peerless commitment to protecting the lives of its citizens is inspiring. We have every confidence that Nevada Project Heartbeat will be an outstanding success, and we are proud to be a part of it.”

    “Single-city PAD programs have become fairly common in the U.S. and have been very successful,” noted Julie Redding, Program Coordinator, Nevada Rural AED Grant Program at University of Nevada School of Medicine, Office of Rural Health. “It is our hope that Nevada’s statewide program will inspire health professionals in the rest of the country to think creatively about how to design effective, accessible defibrillation programs that can have a broader impact. The University of Nevada, School of Medicine, Office of Rural Health is proud to be a partner in this effort.”
    About Nevada Project Heartbeat

    For more information on how your organization can establish and benefit from a Heartsafe environment, visit Nevada Project Heartbeat at www.padprograms.com/nevada. You may also call the Nevada Project Heartbeat contacts listed in with this release. Whichever method of contact you choose, do it today. SCA knows no barriers. The life you save may be your own.


    | Comments (1)
    National EMS Museum Foundation Launches Virtual Museum
    20. April 2007 @ 19:03


    We are pleased to announce limited access to the National EMS Museum Foundation Virtual Museum! This has been a project of several months duration, and we are thrilled to report that today, April 20, 2007, marks the first public access to this site.

    In anticipation of going fully operational in a few weeks, we wanted to give everyone a "sneak peek".If you find some areas still not accessible, don't worry! Soon, they will be loaded with more interesting things for you to see and learn about! We hope you will be pleased with the effort and come back again and again to venture around the wings and stacks as they begin to fill up with the generous submissions of our many contributors! Simply "click" on the points of the stars and you are off and running "Click" on the center of any star, and you will return to the main VM page.

    I would also like to take this opportunity to introduce the current Staff Members of the Virtual Museum.

    They are:

    Valerie DeFrance AK IT Content and Site Management
    Julie K. Scadden IA Administrative Liason to the Board of Trustees, NEMSMF Corporate Secretary

    Regional Directors

    States Region Director

    Asst VM Director Region 2 Dawn Poetter

    CA, NV, Pac. Prot Director, Region 1 Tom Anglim

    AZ, UT, CO, NM Director, Region 4 Mike Shabkie

    NE, ND, SD, IA Director, Region 6 Kent Mallette

    SC, NC, VA, WV Director, Region 12 Joseph D. Lipshetz

    MD, DE, NJ, DC Director, Region 13 Ricardo Tappan

    PA, NY Director, Region 14 Al Mattocks

    CT, RI, MA Director, Region 15 John N. Pliakas

    MD/DO, ERN's,Allied Director, Region 23 Keith Wesley, MD

    State Archivists

    State Archivist

    New York Carl J. Post

    North Carolina Mark J. Peck

    Massachusetts Jane MacArthur



    Each of these persons is volunteering their time and talents in a coordinated effort to help secure the history of our profession. Please welcome them and make use of them! If you are in their area, please help them!

    And if you don't see a name listed for your Region or State, please check the NEMSMF
    Home page and click on "Positions Open", read through the Job Descriptions and then please consider joining us!

    Finally, I would like to publicly express my sincere awe of and gratitude to Valerie DeFrance for her exceptional work on this site (and her patience in dealing with those -like me- who have NO clue how she works her magic!). What you see in the VM is the culminated effort of many, but Valerie's talent
    makes it visible to all! I would also like to thank Jules Scadden and Dawn Poetter for their invaluable assistance, as well.

    So, for now? Wander around and let us know what you think. Send any comments or suggestions to info@nemsmf.org . Jules will forward to the appropriate person and all input will be received with a critical eye towards making this Virtual Museum the best it can be.

    Sincerely,

    Kat

    Katharine P. Rickey
    Museum Director
    April 20, 2007
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    Golf Discounts for EMS Professionals (COMING SOON)
    10. April 2007 @ 18:32
    AzEMS.net has partnered with Get Legs Golf to offer Arizona's first golf program specifically geared to the EMS/ Fire industry.

    Over the coming weeks, you will be able to obtain;
    1. Special rates at some of Arizona's Top Golf Courses.
    2. Specialy priced golf lessons.
    3. Order custom golf apparel for the EMS Pro.

    Much more to come...
    | Comments (0)