You've seen it time and again on television shows: After someone suffers a sudden heart attack, emergency room doctors grab the paddles and deliver an electric shock to the patient to help restart a stalled heart.
Such scenes may play out for real at airports, malls, sports arenas, health clubs, golf courses and even some businesses -- and you could be holding the paddles. That's because technology has given us the automated external defibrillator (AED), which is turning up far from hospitals. Some schools and public buildings already have AEDs.
Defibrillation is necessary when a heart begins to beat irregularly. An AED uses an electric shock to help the heart return to its normal rhythm of contraction.
Here's a Q & A to bring you up to speed.
An AED is an electronic device about the size of a large laptop computer. Trained emergency personnel -- or almost anyone else who has had some training -- can use an AED to see whether a heart attack victim needs a jolt of electricity to the heart and, if so, to provide the right shock.
No. The average person, with no medical background, can learn to use an AED in an hour or two. Usually, people learn to use an AED in a four-hour course that also teaches cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). The computerized device will tell a rescuer to keep going only if the sudden cardiac arrest stems from ventricular fibrillation. That's by far the most common heart-rhythm problem in victims of sudden cardiac arrest.
No. The cost of the device has fallen sharply in the past few years.
The rate of sudden cardiac death can be reduced by placing AEDs in the community and by teaching people how to use them. Time is of the essence when cardiac arrest occurs. The rate of survival, literally, drops 10 percent for every minute that goes by without this type of help.
No. When a user puts the AED's electrodes on a victim's chest, the device will read whether the patient's heart needs to be shocked or not. Then the AED will prompt the rescuer through visual and voice commands about the next step. Many of the newer models will talk you through it and will deliver the shock itself if it reads a shockable rhythm.
Absolutely not. The two go hand in hand. CPR can double the chances of survival when used at the moment of collapse and just before an AED delivers a shock. CPR should be started while someone runs for the AED.
Yes. Research shows the survival rates of people who had sudden cardiac arrest in casinos and got prompt AED treatment from security personnel trained to use AEDs. The survival rate for people who got their first shock no more than three minutes after collapse was 74 percent, compared with 49 percent for those shocked after more than three minutes.