Downtown Ottawa park gets public outdoor defibrillator - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:06 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Downtown Ottawa park gets public outdoor defibrillator

St. Luke's Park, which has popular tennis and basketball courts,is seen as an idealplace foran emergency tool that can shock a heart's rhythm back to normal.

St. Luke's Park now hosts one of the city's first outdoor public AEDs, say paramedics

A woman with grey hair wearing a red jacket stands next to a red and white box labelled
Pam Husband, co-founder and director of the Canadian Sudden Arrhythmia Death Syndrome Foundation, at St. Luke's Park in Ottawa on Oct. 23, 2024. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

St. Luke's Park in downtown Ottawanow has a public, outdoorautomatic external defibrillator (AED).

Sudden cardiac arrest, or when someone's heart suddenly stops beating,can happen at any time from a known or unknown underlying condition, said Sudden Arrhythmia Death Syndrome (SADS) Foundation co-founder and director Kate Husband at a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Wednesday.

Her foundation donated the AED, whichwill be in a climate-controlled box on the fieldhouse of the parkbetween Frank,Elgin and Cartierstreets and Gladstone Avenue.

Husband said the park, which has popular tennis and basketball courts,is an idealplace foran emergency tool that can shock a heart's rhythm back to normal.

"Many [of our]families carry an AED with them when they take their kids to their soccer games and their hockey games because they're not sure there will be one on site," she said, referring to the organization'ssupport work.

She didn't share firm plans for more similar donations when asked, saying it's always possible if morepartnerships come together.

A red and white box labelled
The AED is in a climate-controlled box to manage weather. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

Ottawa said it has hundreds of AEDsaround the city, including in emergency vehicles, and encourages non-city organizations to register with paramedics so 911 dispatchers can find the nearest devices.

The city's paramedic service said the AED in St. Luke's Park is one of the city's first outdoor public ones.

Katrysha Gellis with Save Station, a supply company that helps manage the placement of new AEDs, said urgedpeople to think instinctively that someone collapsing could be a case of cardiac failure and to consider using an AED.

Other immediate steps are to assess the person in trouble, call 911 and start CPR.