Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Brings Lifesaving Technology to Region via 9-1-1 Integrated Smartphone App
Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Brings Lifesaving
Technology
to Region via 9-1-1 Integrated Smartphone App
PulsePoint Respond empowers CPR-trained citizens and off-duty
professionals
to provide critical assistance to cardiac arrest victims
Contact:
Mark E. Brady, Chief Spokesperson
(240) 508-7930
@PGFDPIO
UPPER MARLBORO, MD, October 12, 2016 - Today, the Prince
George’s County Fire/EMS Department (PGFD) joined the PulsePoint Foundation and
CTIA Wireless Foundation to bring life-saving technology to the county via the
PulsePoint Respond app. At an event at the Prince George's Sports &
Learning Complex in Landover, County Executive Rushern Baker was joined by PGFD
Fire Chief Marc Bashoor, and CTIA Wireless Foundation Executive Director Athena
Polydorou highlighting the benefits of this mobile app that alerts CPR-trained
citizens of cardiac events in their vicinity so they may administer aid.
The app also notifies users of the closest available
Automated External Defibrillator (AED). Early application of bystander CPR and
rapid defibrillation from an AED have proven to be crucial in improving a
person’s chance of surviving SCA. PulsePoint is not limited to emergency
responders or those with official CPR certification. It can be used by anyone
who has been trained in CPR.
“We are proud to be the first Fire/EMS Department in the NCR
to implement PulsePoint, said Fire Chief Marc Bashoor. “It gives our residents and visitors and the
ability to know when a cardiac arrest is occurring close by, to respond
quickly, and to attempt potentially lifesaving CPR while our paramedics travel
to the scene.”
The PulsePoint app also provides users with a display of
PGFD’s active and recent incidents countywide. On average, PGFD responds to 400
daily calls for service; more than 80 percent are for emergency medical
services.
“By directly alerting those who are qualified and nearby,
maybe in the business next door or on the floor above, PulsePoint is able to
put the right people in the right place at the right time,” said Richard Price,
President of the California-based 501(c)(3) nonprofit PulsePoint Foundation.
The latest AHA guidelines, published in Circulation, state
that such community programs could increase bystander CPR to the roughly
326,000 cardiac arrests that happen outside the hospital each year.
“The project expands PulsePoint coverage to the 900,000
citizens of Prince George’s County over an area of 499 square miles,” said
Brian Frankel, Assistant Fire Chief, Prince George’s County Fire/EMS
Department. “PulsePoint is a powerful new tool for us to engage with our
community to improve cardiac arrest survival rates.”
“By connecting those in critical need with CPR-trained
individuals, the PulsePoint app is saving lives across America. We’re proud to
be a key sponsor of PulsePoint so that Prince George’s County residents will
benefit from this inventive app that leverages Americans’ mobile-first
lifestyles,” said Athena Polydorou, Executive Director of CTIA Wireless
Foundation.
The free PulsePoint app is available for iPhone and Android
and can be downloaded from the iTunes Store and Google Play.
About Prince George’s
County Fire/EMS
The Prince George’s County Fire and
Emergency Medical Services Department is one of the largest and busiest combination, volunteer
and career, Departments in the Country, if not, the world. We responded to a
total of over 140,000 calls for service last year. Eighty percent of these incidents are
EMS-related.
About the PulsePoint
Foundation
PulsePoint is a 501(c)(3) non-profit foundation based in the
San Francisco Bay Area. Through the use of location-aware mobile devices
PulsePoint is building applications that work with local public safety agencies
to improve communications with citizens, empowering them to help reduce the
millions of annual deaths from sudden cardiac arrest (SCA). Deployment of the
PulsePoint app can significantly strengthen the “chain of survival” by
improving bystander response to cardiac arrest victims and increasing the
chance that lifesaving steps will be taken prior to the arrival of emergency
medical services (EMS). PulsePoint is built and maintained by volunteer
engineers at Workday and distributed by our marketing and implementation
partner Physio-Control, Inc. CTIA Wireless Foundation is a key sponsor and
advocate of PulsePoint, providing industry and financial support. Learn more at
www.pulsepoint.org or join the conversation at Facebook and Twitter. The free
app is available for download on iTunes and Google Play.
About CTIA Wireless
Foundation
CTIAWireless Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated
to developing and supporting initiatives that use wireless technology to help
American communities. The Foundation’s innovative programs benefit consumers in
areas such as education, healthcare, safety and the environment. The Foundation
was formed by CTIA-The Wireless Association® member companies in 1991. Learn
more at www.wirelessfoundation.org.
About Sudden Cardiac
Arrest
Although a heart attack can lead to sudden cardiac arrest
(SCA), the two are not the same. SCA is when the heart malfunctions and
suddenly stops beating unexpectedly, whereas a heart attack is when blood flow
to the heart is blocked, but the heart continues to beat. Each year, more than
420,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests occur, making it the leading cause of
death in the United States. Survival rates nationally for SCA are less than
eight percent, but delivery of CPR can sustain life until paramedics arrive by
maintaining vital blood flow to the heart and brain. However, only about a
third of SCA victims receive bystander CPR. Without CPR, brain damage or death
can occur in minutes. The average EMS response time is nine minutes, even in
urban settings; after 10 minutes there is little chance of successful
resuscitation. The American Heart Association estimates that effective
bystander CPR, provided immediately after SCA, can double or triple a person’s
chance of survival.
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