Over 1750 Total Lots Up For Auction at Five Locations - NJ Cleansweep 05/02, TX 05/03, TX 05/06, NJ 05/08, WA 05/09

Philips and the American Heart Association join together to increase global survival rates of sudden cardiac arrest

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | January 23, 2019 Cardiology

Connected Pulse: strengthening the chain of survival for sudden cardiac arrest

By leveraging technology to better connect victims and rescuers – both professional and lay responders – the Connected Pulse program helps optimize improved outcomes within the four critical steps of the chain of survival: 1) alerting emergency medical services; 2) giving CPR to the patient; 3) delivering treatment using an AED; and 4) advanced critical life support, provided by the emergency medical services. Training and awareness programs increase the likelihood of a lay responder being on-hand to provide CPR and treatment using an AED. In addition to the AEDs themselves, technology applications including mapping AEDs and automated alerting of nearby lay responders have the potential to significantly strengthen the chain of survival and increase survival rates.


Components of the customized end-to-end solution from Philips and the American Heart Association will include:

GPS positioning – identifies the nearest available AED and a CPR certified person in close proximity to help assist.
Command center application – software intelligently guides dispatch operators to coordinate care delivery to the patient during an SCA event.
Integration and analytics engine – using industries standards, the solution will provide data driven decision making to enable smooth data transfer across systems.
Telephone CPR training – dispatch operators give hands-only CPR instructions over the phone until the emergency responders arrive. Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients who receive Telephone CPR are 64 percent more likely to survive to discharge than OHCA patients who do not receive CPR[5].
Updated EMS Training – ensures first responders receive competency-based training on CPR and assess gaps to identify where better training is needed.
Training Kiosks – interactive touch screens offer a 30-second CPR test, currently available in 32 high traffic areas in the U.S. including airports. More than 160,000 people have been trained on the kiosks.
CPR in Schools Training kit – easy to use kit contains content to train 10 to 20 students at a time.
AHA Training centers – currently available in 80 countries across the world, including China, Brazil, Japan, Mexico, United Arab Emirates, Italy and India.
Public Education Training Campaign – drives awareness of symptoms of cardiac arrest and helps promote bystander education.
In hospital CPR quality improvement through RQI (Resuscitation Quality Improvement) program – low-dose, high-frequency quarterly skills sessions improve CPR competency and are setting a new standard of resuscitation and patient care currently at more than 400 hospitals and for over 300,000 healthcare professionals in the U.S.

You Must Be Logged In To Post A Comment