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Royal Phillips to donate AED to volunteer unit

This is the one-millionth HeartStart AED that the company has donated

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Photo Philips
The donation of the HeartStart AED is the company’s millionth. Philips will also be donating more AEDs to other Washington State crews.

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Royal Philips Electronics, a company focusing on developing treatments to combat sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), announced it will donate the one-millionth HeartStart automated external defibrillator (AED) manufactured to Everett Mountain Rescue Unit (EMRU) of Snohomish, Wash.

EMRU is a volunteer search and rescue organization serving Snohomish County, Wash., also the location of Philips’ HeartStart headquarters.

According to a release, the one-millionth AED marks a milestone in Philips’ more than 50 year legacy of cardiac resuscitation and solutions to combat the potentially fatal effects of SCA, a condition that claims the lives of approximately seven million people globally every year. Philips will also make AED donations to nine other local search and rescue organizations, including Snohomish County Volunteer Search and Rescue (SCVSAR) and eight groups associated with the Washington Mountain Rescue Association (WMRA).

“We pride ourselves on expanding public access to AEDs so that virtually anyone can have the power to help save a life,” said Mike Mancuso, executive vice president and CEO, Philips Patient Care and Clinical Informatics.

“Experts at Philips have worked with community-based early defibrillation champions and resuscitation health care leaders to drive early defibrillation program best practices, and have helped establish defibrillation programs at the top U.S. airlines and the nation’s busiest hospitals. We are dedicated to saving lives and overjoyed that so many HeartStart AEDs are now available across the globe for emergency situations.”

Philips introduced the ForeRunner AED in 1996 was one of the main catalysts for the public access defibrillation movement that also included legislation to influence public access to AEDs in the U.S., Japan, France, the United Kingdom, Australia and many other countries. Philips has evolved its AEDs in response to the needs of the industry and its customers, and has continued to offer solutions that minimize deployment time.

“Most of the search and rescue organizations receiving the donated AEDs today have either never had one, or have earlier models, which were not built for extreme conditions,” said Richard Duncan, operations leader with EMRU and flight paramedic with SCVSAR helicopter rescue team. “Our new Philips AEDs have a rugged, reliable construction, which will aid our rescues in difficult, outdoor conditions. Washington’s mountains attract thousands of climbers and outdoor enthusiasts from around the world each year. The donation from Philips will allow us to serve them and the community more confidently than ever before.”

Nearly 300,000 lives are claimed each year in the U.S. from SCA. In fact, SCA can happen to anyone, regardless of age or physical fitness and there are often no symptoms leading up to a collapse. The best chance of survival from the most common causes of SCA is defibrillation from an AED within a few minutes of collapse. For every minute that passes without CPR and defibrillation, survival decreases by seven to 10 percent, making access to AEDs crucial in these emergency situations.

Philips also provides resources so more people like the volunteers at SCVSAR and WMRA can turn from a bystander to a life-saver by using a HeartStart AED. In addition to professional training offered by Philips professionals, Philips also recently launched the Save Lives website, which helps inform people across the world about SCA and enable them to act in an emergency. The site provides information on how to use an AED and what to do if someone is suffering from SCA.

The complete list of organizations receiving a Philips HeartStart AED donation includes:

-Snohomish County Volunteer Search and Rescue (SCVSAR)

-Bellingham Mountain Rescue Council part of the WMRA

-Central Washington Mountain Rescue Council part of the WMRA

-Everett Mountain Rescue Unit part of the WMRA

-Inland Northwest Search & Rescue (INSAR) part of the WMRA

-North County Volcano Rescue Team part of the WMRA

-Olympic Mountain Rescue part of the WMRA

-Seattle Mountain Rescue part of the WMRA

-Skagit Mountain Rescue part of the WMRA

-Tacoma Mountain Rescue part of the WMRA

Royal Philips Electronics is a diversified health and well-being company.

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