Showing posts with label National CPR/AED Awareness Week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National CPR/AED Awareness Week. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

CPR and a Cocktail

by Raul Jauregui, volunteer contributor
DFW YPA members learn
life-saving CPR techniques

Do you ever feel like you could be doing more to give back? 

This is one question I constantly toss around in my mind. I wanted to join an organization that had the same ideas of giving back as I did. Being a young professional, the Red Cross DFW Young Professional’s Auxiliary (YPA) seemed like the perfect answer to my question. 

The YPA is a social networking group that comes together every couple of months to promote the Red Cross or introduce different types of Red Cross services, like life-saving training at the event held at SISU Bar and Restaurant last month. Keith Bridges of the Red Cross demonstrated techniques and steps on how to provide cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). 

The session was impromptu with several people huddled around a demonstration table…until it buckled under the weight of the volunteers who were learning the chest pump technique! It was a humorous moment, but it did not stop Keith from showing how to properly apply the chest pump. The volunteers moved to a more secured table and Keith took the opportunity to give tricks and insights on CPR, like how the timing of applied chest pumps is the same beat as the Bee Gees song "Staying Alive." It is the simple trivia that can make all the difference.
Red Cross instructor Keith Bridges teaches CPR
techniques at a YPA event last month.
The training got many of the event attendees interested in taking formal CPR training at the local Red Cross Dallas Area Chapter so they could save lives through a few more hours of their time. (P.S. Since it’s National CPR/AED Awareness Week, it’s the perfect time to look into getting trained! June class schedules for DFW are now up at RedCross.org/DFW.)

Red Cross YPA events like these always add value because it brings together many types of young professionals who don't normally cross paths. It’s an extra opportunity to meet others who have similar interests to you and learn the degrees of separation that are closer to Kevin Bacon than you realize. Each event always leaves me feeling like I gave more back to my community than when I first walked in. For me, these are the beginning steps to giving back with an organization I feel fits me. It’s the opening chapter in what I hope is a long story with the Red Cross.

If you want to support the YPA, check out our Red Hot Summer Fiesta this Thursday, June 6 starting at 6pm at Hacienda on Henderson. 100% of proceeds will benefit Red Cross Disaster Relief. To learn more, visit us online at RedCross.org/DFW or on Facebook at Facebook.com/AmericanRedCrossDFWYPA.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

National CPR/AED Week: How Chris Knight Died Five Times and Lived to Tell About It

written by Katie Josephson, volunteer contributor


In honor of National CPR/AED Awareness Week, we'd like to share a story with you, and then we need you to take action. Is that a fair trade? We'll let you be the judge.

Chris Knight works today at the American Red Cross Amarillo chapter.

Meet Chris Knight. Chris spent 18 years working in radio stations across the U.S. before settling permanently in Amarillo, TX where he worked in radio and television.

In 2008, he visited Naperville, Illinois for a relative's wedding. "It was August 9, 2008 at 10:30 on a Saturday morning. I was outside the Marriott hotel with my wife in the lobby. That's when I dropped dead. There was no warning, whatsoever. I face planted and my glasses smashed against the ground."

Luckily for Chris, a policewoman was around the corner and responded in less than three minutes. The officer also had an AED (automated external defibrillator), which applies electric therapy to stop cardiac arrhythmias.

"I had sudden cardiac arrest. The policewoman used the AED to administer a shock, but the first time I didn't respond. Then she shocked me again with the AED and my heart started beating."

Not only was a nearby policewoman prepared with a life-saving AED, but also an unidentified man stepped in to help as soon as Chris fell and performed CPR for almost seven minutes. “The man must have been well trained in CPR because he did it right – my whole chest and ribs were cracked The ambulance arrived. They took me to Edwards Hospital in Naperville, one of the top cardiac hospitals in the country. My heart stopped in the ambulance and they shocked me again. Then my heart stopped when we got to the hospital and they revived me. And then on the table, my heart stopped twice more. I died five times, and each time they brought me back."

The hospital called Dr. Mark Duerinck, a local cardiologist who was in downtown Chicago teaching a cardiology class. "He knew immediately what happened to me and told the hospital staff to wait for him to arrive before treating me." Chris had a double, right-sided event and all of his platelets exploded.

He spent the next seven days in a coma. "At one time, I had 17 machines keeping me alive. I couldn't breath on my own. They also put me into a thermal blanket and lowered my body temperature to 38 degrees so doctors could examine me more closely to understand what was wrong."

Chris spent 30 days in the hospital. During his stay, he had pneumonia twice, three full blood transfusions and a defibrillator and pacemaker were implanted in him.



Making Lifestyle Changes After Sudden Cardiac Arrest

Experiencing sudden cardiac arrest took a physical and emotional toll on Chris as well as his family and friends.

"After the incident, I lost 35 pounds. I started therapy two weeks after getting home and it took me four months to roll over in bed. It took about a year to feel half-way decent again."


Chris took dramatic steps to improve his health and lifestyle. "Before sudden cardiac arrest, I felt like I was six feet tall and bullet proof. But after the incident, it's like—not really. My whole perspective is different now."

"I've never had another cigarette. I rarely drink. I quit eating terribly. I was the poster boy for fast food restaurants, and now I exercise nearly every day. You wouldn't even know I died five times by looking at me."

He is fortunate appreciative of for the police and medical staff who saved his life as well as the family and friends who prayed for him during his recovery. "The support I received was absolutely amazing; I was incredibly lucky to be where I was when this happened to me, and I am grateful to all of the people who supported my recovery."



Family members and friends also have to deal with the effects of sudden cardiac arrests. "The incident was extremely hard on my wife. To see your spouse walking one minute and drop dead the next - I can't imagine. No one dies and comes back."



Becoming a Health Advocate

According to the Mayo Clinic, "sudden cardiac arrest is the sudden, unexpected loss of heart function, breathing and consciousness. Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) usually results from an electrical disturbance in your heart that disrupts its pumping action, stopping blood flow to the rest of your body."

Following sudden cardiac arrest, Chris transitioned from a career in radio and television to a position with the Red Cross as the Executive Director in the Panhandle Area.

"I'm very passionate about safety, training and the mission of the Red Cross. I still get freaked out about what happened to me. I still go back to the question - why am I here? I want to help prepare my community with AEDs and life-saving training."

The American Red Cross, through Health and Safety Services, offers CPR and AED training. Chris is always happy to explain that the machine is one of the reasons he is here today. He also speaks to civic groups about the American Red Cross and AEDs.

Chris also speaks to a therapy group for people who have had open heart surgery. "We talk about what people are going through. Empathy and listening is important because the recovery and therapy process is challenging."



Your Turn: How to Take Action

Chris recommends you take the following steps in order to be prepared for health emergencies:

• Learn more & be prepared: Sign up for a CPR/AED class and learn hands-only CPR from this Red Cross video. Know where AEDs are at your office, gym, church and more. Help for Sudden Cardiac Arrest often comes from bystanders.

• Listen to your body: "Don't brush aside funny feelings or if you're not well. I felt completely fine and had great blood pressure and cholesterol levels. But I smoked, I was diabetic and had a lot of stress. Don't put off talking to your doctor about not feeling well."

• Enjoy every day: "Every day is a new day. Enjoy it. Treat people well and don't take what you have for granted. I know I did. Now I try not to."

Please share with your friends, family, neighbors and co-workers.

To sign up for an American Red Cross CPR, First Aid and AED course, go to redcross.org or call 1-800-RED CROSS.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Red Cross Life-Saving Skills. Bingo!


Group photo of recipients with Steve Modory, American Red Cross - Dallas Area Chapter Chairman of the Board and Cheryl Sutterfield-Jones, American Red Cross - Dallas Area Chapter CEO.

Regular Saturday Bingo players gathered at the Plano Senior Recreation Center last July, each with hopes of winning the big jackpot. Sara Deats and Maria Ramirez, both City of Plano employees, showed up for work expecting an ordinary day. However, this wasn't going to be an ordinary day.

During the game, a player's heart stopped beating. Deats and Ramirez joined forces and called 9-1-1 while retrieving an AED (automated external defibrillator). While Deats began administering CPR, Ramirez prepared the AED and administered shocks to the victim. The duo continued their lifesaving skills until EMS arrived. Without a doubt, if Deats and Ramirez had not been on duty that night, and if they had not been trained in an American Red Cross CPR/AED course, the victim would not have survived.

Due to their heroic efforts, President Barack Obama has recognized them with a special medal and a hand-signed Certificate of Merit, the first issued under his new administration. The Certificate of Merit is the highest award given by the American Red Cross to someone who saves a life because of the skills they learned in a Red Cross Health & Safety Course. Deats and Ramirez were presented with their medals and their hand-signed Certificates of Merit at a special ceremony on Wednesday, June 3, 2009 at the Dallas Area Chapter of the Red Cross.

For their lifesaving efforts, fellow City of Plano employees Amy Fortenberry and Pamela Perry were also presented with this honor.

Fortenberry's skills were put to the test during a work-related training course when her instructor suddenly dropped face forward into the base of the podium. He wasn’t breathing. Fortenberry and another classmate sprang into action and began administering CPR while others went to locate the AED. Fortenberry continued CPR until the AED arrived and then administered shocks to the victim. She saved her instructor's life. Perry was at work at the City of Plano when she heard someone yelling down the hallway that a man with heart problems had gone down in the fitness room. Perry grabbed the on-site AED and raced to the area. She began CPR until a nurse arrived. The nurse continued CPR while Perry prepared the AED to administer shocks. Together, they saved the life of their co-worker.

“If there were a contest to determine who has the best trained staff in CPR, the City of Plano would come out the winner,” said Kevin Billings, Director of Preparedness, American Red Cross-Dallas Area Chapter. “To have four employees presented with this presidential award in the same year is amazing. Imagine what would have happened to the victims if the City of Plano didn’t take training their employees seriously.”

The American Red Cross urges at least one person in every family to know how to perform CPR. In honor of National CPR and AED Week, June 1-7, the Dallas Area Chapter is offering 2-for-1 pricing for Adult CPR/AED certification on Friday, June 7, 2009. Course hours are from 8:00 a.m.-12:30 p.m. or from 1:00 p.m.-5:30 p.m. Take advantage of the 2-for-1 special pricing and bring a friend for $40 each! To enroll in a course, go to
www.redcrossdallas.org and register online.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Drowning in a Pool of Love

Since June is National Safety Month, and June 1-7 is National CPR/AED Awareness week, we have a movie that celebrates both. While Wendy Peppercorn may be the best lifeguard ever, it is never a good idea to fake a drowning. Maybe a lesson or two can be learned from this classic clip of The Sandlot.

It doesn't want to link to the blog for some reason (must love computers) so here is the link. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vr5lHZQz-Z4

To keep you breathing easy this summer, the American Red Cross - Dallas Area Chapter is offering 2-for-1 pricing for Adult CPR/AED certification through June 7, 2009. Course hours are from 8:00a.m.-12:30p.m. or from 1:00p.m.-5:30p.m. Take advantage of the 2-for-1 special pricing and bring a friend for $40 each! To enroll in a course, go to www.redcrossdallas.org and register online under Take a class.