High school hero: a man in cardiac arrest got the shock of his life--thanks to the efforts of 17-year-old Matt Strauss.It was March 12, 2003, and Pittsburgh's Penn Hills High School was playing against Chartiers Valley High School Chartiers Valley High School (Established in 1959) is a public school in the Bridgeville borough of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, USA. Awards and recognition In 2007, Chartiers Valley High School's Language Arts Program was awarded the Pennsylvania State Modern Language in the varsity basketball finals. Matt Strauss, a 17-years-old junior, was there to cheer on his team. The tension was high, with seconds left to play and Penn Hills down by only a few points, when Matt heard a loud thud behind him. About 10 rows back, 48-year-old Martin Gannon had collapsed on the bleachers. Instinctively, Matt grabbed the AED AED - Automated Engineering Design at his feet and rushed to help. Two physicians who happened to be sitting nearby began CPR Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) Definition Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is a procedure to support and maintain breathing and circulation for a person who has stopped breathing (respiratory arrest) and/or whose heart has stopped (cardiac , assisted by a parent who had been trained in CPR and AED use. Matt hooked up the AED and instructed the crowd to stand back, which was probably the biggest challenge. "It was total chaos," he says. Following the device's voice instructions, Matt pressed the shock button once. "Within three seconds, there was a pulse, and then Mr. Gannon started gurgling Gurgling is a characteristic sound made by unstable two-phase fluid flow, for example, as liquid is poured from a bottle, or during gargling. and coughing," he says. "When EMS arrived, he was sitting up, talking and grinning." Resuscitation resuscitation /re·sus·ci·ta·tion/ (-sus?i-ta´shun) restoration to life of one apparently dead. cardiopulmonary resuscitation Readiness Today, Gannon is alive and well and considers himself lucky. But it wasn't just luck that Matt was ready to resuscitate re·sus·ci·tate v. To restore consciousness, vigor, or life to. . The fact that this high school had an AED on hand at the unpredictable time of need was a result of Matt's tireless efforts during the previous year. It all began in January 2002, when Matt saw an ad for an EMT See Efficient markets theory. class at a community college and decided to pursue the training, taking his classes on Saturdays. Six months and 144 hours of training later, he began to volunteer for a local ambulance company, usually working Friday nights. During this time Matt became increasingly aware of the importance of defibrillation Defibrillation Definition Defibrillation is a process in which an electronic device sends an electric shock to the heart to stop an extremely rapid, irregular heartbeat, and restore the normal heart rhythm. , not only because of his new role, but also because of media coverage of the subject. "I kept seeing articles about AEDs popping up everywhere, including the Internet," he said. What brought it home was when someone collapsed at the grocery store where Matt worked. Matt performed CPR, but the EMS defibrillator defibrillator, device that delivers an electrical shock to the heart in order to stop certain forms of rapid heart rhythm disturbances (arrhythmias). The shock changes a fibrillation to an organized rhythm or changes a very rapid and ineffective cardiac rhythm to a arrived too late to be of any value. By then, Matt, who also volunteers his time as a student athletic trainer, began to think about the benefits of having an AED available for school sporting events. When he approached the school administration and school board with the idea, he was rebuffed. But he persisted, and when there was a change in the school leadership, the program got the green light. At the advice of the school's athletic trainer, Matt applied for a grant from a local hospital foundation, which supplied the school district with two AEDs. By August 2002, 12 volunteers, including teachers, coaches and students, had been trained. It became routine for coaches and athletic trainers to make sure the AEDs traveled to every game. It was Matt's turn to carry the device on that fateful day in March. "Mr. Gannon was dead one second, and the next, we're pressing the button and he's back," Matt says. He probably would not be alive today if we weren't able to shock him so quickly. Think about it ... it could have been your mom, your grandma, the coach, a teacher--who knows? The thing is, the more you know, the more you can help." And what about the basketball game? "We lost the playoffs," says Matt, "but I guess you could say we won at something much more important." |
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