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"'New House Medical has been very easy to work with. Their communications are quick and easy to comprehend."

"In the busy life of an athletic trainer working with and purchasing AED equipment through New House Medical has been a very easy task."

Randy Meador, MS, ATC
West Virginia University

"'NewHouse Medical and their representatives provide outstanding customer service and great pricing. In addition to helping us choose the right AED unit for our facilities, NewHouse representatives were willing to provide an in-service to our staff of 60 employees to ensure that we were comfortable with using the new unit. We are happy to recommend this vendor to other companies!"'

Betsey Schmidt, MEd, ATC
Healthworks

Sudden Cardiac Death in Division I Collegiate Athletics: Analysis of Automated External Defibrillator Utilization in National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I Athletic Programs.

Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine. 15(2):87-91, March 2005.
Coris, Eric E MD *; Miller, Ernestine MD +; Sahebzamani, Frances PhD, ARNP +

Objective: To determine current outcomes of automated external defibrillator (AED) interventions in sports medicine programs in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) division I athletics.

Design: Qualitative scripted telephone interview with all positive responders to prior NCAA division I-wide study on AED utilization and implementation.

Setting: NCAA division I sports medicine programs. Head athletic trainers were the main data source.

Participants: All positive responders to a previously published study on AED implementation in the NCAA division I sports medicine community. Positive responders were those that indicated that they had used their departmental AEDs in a sudden cardiac death (SCD) scenario.

Main Outcome Measurements: Survival to hospital discharge was the main outcome sought. When available, additional outcomes were time to defibrillation, time to notification of athletic training staff, EMS response time, location of event, and sudden cardiac victim type (i.e., student, coach, fan).

Results: Sixteen departments that previously reported having had an SCD event at their institution responded to this follow-up telephone survey. Twenty percent of AED uses were attributed to student athletes, with 33% of utilizations for athletic department staff and 47% for fans. Defibrillation was actually administered in 53% of AED unit applications. Time to shock was an average of 3.4 minutes, with average EMS response time of 8.2 minutes for those events without EMS on site. Reported survival to hospital discharge in this university athletic department setting for SCD was 0% for students, 75% for staff, 57% for fans, and 61% overall.

Conclusions: The results of this study demonstrate the need for NCAA division 1 athletic sports medicine programs to examine, and possibly expand, the traditional scope of practice of caring primarily for student athletes to include the larger community of sports participants comprised of athletes, departmental staff, and spectators. Athletic department AED programs were extremely successfully at increasing survival of SCD far above national prehospital standards, mainly in the nonathletic population. Further study is also necessary in the realm of AED placement, maintenance, and training of staff.

(C) 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.


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