Vital new technology saving lives after heart attacks

If an off-duty doctor didnā€™t know a nearby school had a defibrillator, Steven Simpson thinks he might not have made it through a recent heart attack.

Mr Simpson had just made son Liam a coffee on June 28 when he went into cardiac arrest, leaving his son to call triple-zero and start delivering CPR.

But while he waited for an ambulance, the GoodSAM app notified emergency doctor Rhys Ross-Browne of the incident, and he attended to take over care.

ā€œApparently there was a knock on the door, a guy turned up and said, ā€˜Iā€™m a local doctor, I got a message there was a cardiac arrest. Iā€™m here to help youā€™,ā€ Mr Simpson told AAP.

ā€œThat amazed us. Iā€™d never heard of (the app).ā€

The free app alerts registered community members to nearby incidents in the hope it cuts the gap between triple-zero calls and the start of CPR for victims of cardiac arrest.

The NSW public access defibrillator registry has been incorporated into the app, in what should be a huge boost to a victimā€™s chance of survival.

Mr Simpson knew it was what saved him ā€“ Dr Ross-Browne shocked him twice before the ambulance arrived before paramedics had to give him another three hits.

Dr Ross-Brown didnā€™t have the benefit of the app guiding him to a defibrillator, but happened to know a nearby school had one on hand.

ā€œDefibrillators are all out in the community, a lot of businesses have them, but nobody else knows theyā€™ve got them,ā€ Mr Simpson said.

ā€œIt would be massive if every one of them registered their location so when something like this happens and theyā€™ve got volunteers coming to help you, they also get told where the nearest defibs are ā€¦ it would save so many more lives.ā€

More than 4300 defibrillators are registered with the app.

GoodSAM volunteers have helped save 30 patients since the app launched in November, with 12 of them benefiting from a defibrillator shock before an ambulance arrived.

Health Minister Ryan Park said volunteers being guided to the devices could hugely improve the cardiac arrest survival rate.

ā€œItā€™s all well and good to have defibrillators around the community, but if people donā€™t know their location, theyā€™re going to be of little help in a life and death situation,ā€ he said.

ā€œI encourage everyone who has an AED to register it online with NSW Ambulance so GoodSAM responders can see it in the app.ā€

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Alex Mitchell
(Australian Associated Press)

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