The Sudden Cardiac Arrest Foundation is dedicated to bringing you the latest news and developments in sudden cardiac arrest prevention and treatment.

Akron Nurses Commended for Heroic Actions

COLUMBUS — State Rep. Anthony DeVitis (R-District 36) recently presented Ohio House commendations to two local nurses who saved the life of runner Tony Lindeman in the Akron Marathon Sept. 29. Lindeman was one of 13,000 running in the marathon that day, and as he neared the second mile marker, he collapsed and stopped breathing, according to… Read More

NJ Senators Introduce Bill Protecting Good Samaritans Who Use AEDs

A bill, sponsored by New Jersey State Senators Bob Gordon (D-38 Fair Lawn) and Joseph F. Vitale (D-Middlesex) that would protect good Samaritans who use an automated external defibrillator (AED) while attempting to save someone’s life from civil liability was approved by the full Senate on Monday and is now scheduled for a vote in the Assembly on… Read More

SCA Foundation Presents AED to Winner of First iRescU AED Challenge

NEW YORK--Linda Cotter-Forbes, of Rhinebeck, New York, was recognized yesterday at an awards ceremony at the New York Athletic Club for winning first place in the first iRescU AED Scavenger Hunt Challenge. The Challenge was launched during the 2011 American Heart Association Conference in November. Linda reported the location of 37 AEDs during a… Read More

Will Anti-Arryhthymic Drug Beat SCA?

Sudden Cardiac Arrest (SCA) is the leading cause of death in the United States.  SCA kills 325,000 people every year, representing one death every two minutes. Almost all SCA victims die before they even reach a hospital. To identify a drug that paramedics can use in the field, UC San Diego Health System has opened a clinical trial to evaluate two… Read More

Survey: Most Americans Unfamiliar with Heart Rhythm Disorders and SCA

Washington, D.C. - According to a new survey issued by the Heart Rhythm Society, the majority of Americans are unaware of two serious and potentially life-threatening heart rhythm disorders: atrial fibrillation (AF) and sudden cardiac arrest (SCA). In fact, only one in three Americans has ever heard of AF or recognize the number of lives claimed… Read More

Allegheny General Hospital Doctors Perform Innovative Treatment for Ventricular Tachycardia

Pittsburgh, PA (PRWEB) - Heart specialists at Allegheny General Hospital (AGH) have joined a select group in the country offering patients who suffer from the common and potentially deadly heart rhythm disorder ventricular tachycardia(VT) a new, minimally invasive therapy called epicardial VT ablation. One of the leading causes of sudden… Read More

iRescU AED Scavenger Hunt Winners to Be Recognized on Valentine's Day in NYC

  iRescU announced the winners of its inaugural Scavenger Hunt Challenges today for geolocating Automated External Defibrillators (AED)- heart starting devices - in the community. iRescU is a new public education and information initiative under development to help save lives, using crowd sourcing, cloud-based technology and smartphones to… Read More

Study: Fainting a Factor in SCA

LONDON, Ontario – Up to 45,000 sudden cardiac arrests occur each year in Canada, and less than five percent survive. In some of these cases, the event cannot be explained by the presence of underlying heart disease. In order to identify people at risk of these unexplained cardiac events, a newly published study examined the presence of certain… Read More

13-Year-Old Saves Mother's Life--to the Tune of Stayin' Alive

NORTHAMPTON, MA - As he performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation on his mother, 13-year-old George Hamilton says he was driven by a Bee Gees song. "I was kinda going, 'Stayin' alive, Stayin' alive,'" he said recently, mimicking the compressions he delivered to the beat of the 1977 disco classic. The teen's efforts, paramedics say, helped save… Read More

Bystanders Use Airport's AED to Save a Life

DULUTH, MN - Bystanders used an automated external defibrillator and CPR to revive a woman who collapsed at Duluth International Airport on Sunday afternoon. The woman was waiting to go through security when she collapsed. Bystanders, including a nurse, couldn't find a pulse or sign of breathing. A Transportation Security Administration supervisor… Read More