Santa Clara County, Calif., agencies use the PulsePoint app with the goal of mobilizing CPR-trained citizens if someone in their immediate area is experiencing cardiac arrest.
Matt Wilson, McClatchy News | June 13, 2014
When it comes to helping a victim of cardiac arrest, it's all about speed. PulsePoint, a life-saving mobile app, may not necessarily increase the speed at which first responders arrive, but it adds more legs to the race.
Santa Clara County, Calif., agencies began using the PulsePoint app earlier this year with the goal of mobilizing CPR-trained residents and bystanders into becoming first responders.
The free app uses location-based technology to alert CPR-trained citizens if someone in their immediate area is experiencing sudden cardiac arrest. The alerted citizen can then choose to spring into action, find the victim and begin resuscitation until official emergency responders arrive.
"I can do an important job that the fire department cannot do," says PulsePoint Foundation president and app inventor Richard Price, adding that first responders "can't get there in two minutes. I can sustain life until they arrive."
Price, the former chief of the San Ramon Valley Fire Protection District, conceived the idea in 2009 after there was a cardiac arrest incident near him that he was unaware of and could not respond to. The idea came just as the smart phone revolution was gaining serious momentum.
"This idea to push a message to a phone is fairly new, and the ability for the phone to know where it's at is still fairly new," Price says.
Price adds that there are associated time costs that people forget about between the initial 911 call and paramedics arriving to assist. Call dispatchers have to take information, firefighters and paramedics need to scramble to their vehicles, and responders still need to get to the precise location of the victim.
All of this needs to happen in nine minutes, after which Price says there is a 92 percent chance of death.
"In these first few minutes, you can really make a difference," Price says. "You just think about these minutes as a [baseball] score, and you don't want to start in a deep hole. You don't win many games when it's 9-0 in the first inning."
While the app is available to all CPR-trained individuals, the real target audience is off-duty firefighters, nurses and other life-saving professionals. However, Price adds that all CPR-trained individuals are valuable, and simply being aware of the app can stimulate awareness of CPR and trigger more discussion, especially for younger more tech-savvy residents.
"It helps the whole system, even if you never get activated. It reinvigorates an old technique," Price says. "It's not your dad's CPR; it's more modern and it's a new way to be a member of this community."
When PulsePoint comes to a jurisdiction, it is tied to the 911 dispatch of supporting cities. Users who download the app will state that they are CPR trained and would be willing to assist in the event of an emergency. The app also gives a quick refresher on proper CPR.
PulsePoint first came to Santa Clara County in 2012 in the city of San Jose. Financial support for the program's full rollout in the county came from El Camino Hospital.
Earlier this month, El Camino Hospital and the PulsePoint Foundation also announced the launch of a second PulsePoint mobile app, PulsePoint AED, which aims to have comprehensive registry of public automated external defibrillators.
To date, hundreds of cities have signed on with PulsePoint, and plenty of lives have been saved. Recent media reports tell the story of the early May rescue of a 57-year-old truck driver in Clackamas, Ore., who was given CPR by an off-duty firefighter who just happened to be near the same fitness center as the victim.
In 2011, the PulsePoint Foundation was formed. The foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, and all engineers working on the project are volunteers from Workday Inc. in Pleasanton.
"Creating this was a heavy lift with a lot of people," Price says. "They are a part of a tremendous opportunity that we thought, if we could pull it off, could save a lot of lives."
For more information, visit pulsepoint.org or elcaminohospital.org/CPRHelpNow.
©2014 The Cupertino Courier (San Jose, Calif.)
www.emergencymanagement.com
Santa Clara County, Calif., agencies began using the PulsePoint app earlier this year with the goal of mobilizing CPR-trained residents and bystanders into becoming first responders.
The free app uses location-based technology to alert CPR-trained citizens if someone in their immediate area is experiencing sudden cardiac arrest. The alerted citizen can then choose to spring into action, find the victim and begin resuscitation until official emergency responders arrive.
"I can do an important job that the fire department cannot do," says PulsePoint Foundation president and app inventor Richard Price, adding that first responders "can't get there in two minutes. I can sustain life until they arrive."
Price, the former chief of the San Ramon Valley Fire Protection District, conceived the idea in 2009 after there was a cardiac arrest incident near him that he was unaware of and could not respond to. The idea came just as the smart phone revolution was gaining serious momentum.
"This idea to push a message to a phone is fairly new, and the ability for the phone to know where it's at is still fairly new," Price says.
Price adds that there are associated time costs that people forget about between the initial 911 call and paramedics arriving to assist. Call dispatchers have to take information, firefighters and paramedics need to scramble to their vehicles, and responders still need to get to the precise location of the victim.
All of this needs to happen in nine minutes, after which Price says there is a 92 percent chance of death.
"In these first few minutes, you can really make a difference," Price says. "You just think about these minutes as a [baseball] score, and you don't want to start in a deep hole. You don't win many games when it's 9-0 in the first inning."
While the app is available to all CPR-trained individuals, the real target audience is off-duty firefighters, nurses and other life-saving professionals. However, Price adds that all CPR-trained individuals are valuable, and simply being aware of the app can stimulate awareness of CPR and trigger more discussion, especially for younger more tech-savvy residents.
"It helps the whole system, even if you never get activated. It reinvigorates an old technique," Price says. "It's not your dad's CPR; it's more modern and it's a new way to be a member of this community."
When PulsePoint comes to a jurisdiction, it is tied to the 911 dispatch of supporting cities. Users who download the app will state that they are CPR trained and would be willing to assist in the event of an emergency. The app also gives a quick refresher on proper CPR.
PulsePoint first came to Santa Clara County in 2012 in the city of San Jose. Financial support for the program's full rollout in the county came from El Camino Hospital.
Earlier this month, El Camino Hospital and the PulsePoint Foundation also announced the launch of a second PulsePoint mobile app, PulsePoint AED, which aims to have comprehensive registry of public automated external defibrillators.
To date, hundreds of cities have signed on with PulsePoint, and plenty of lives have been saved. Recent media reports tell the story of the early May rescue of a 57-year-old truck driver in Clackamas, Ore., who was given CPR by an off-duty firefighter who just happened to be near the same fitness center as the victim.
In 2011, the PulsePoint Foundation was formed. The foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, and all engineers working on the project are volunteers from Workday Inc. in Pleasanton.
"Creating this was a heavy lift with a lot of people," Price says. "They are a part of a tremendous opportunity that we thought, if we could pull it off, could save a lot of lives."
For more information, visit pulsepoint.org or elcaminohospital.org/CPRHelpNow.
©2014 The Cupertino Courier (San Jose, Calif.)
www.emergencymanagement.com
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