• Home
  • All News
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Submit an article
We Are South Devon
Advertisement
  • Home
  • All News
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Submit an article
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • All News
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Submit an article
No Result
View All Result
We Are South Devon
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • All News
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Submit an article

New life-saving equipment rolled out at hospital

We Are South Devon by We Are South Devon
August 15, 2019
in Community News

A large-scale introduction of the most high-tech emergency equipment is taking place across the Trust.

Defibrillators are an essential part of Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust’s life-saving capability.

RelatedPosts

The Create Growth Programme returns to Torbay and Devon

Have you seen Torbay man wanted by police?

How Torquay Votes

More than 70 defibrillators have been replaced with the most modern versions in Torbay Hospital and the patient transport fleet. As part of this mass roll-out, hundreds of staff have also been trained in their use.

The next phase will see the user-friendly machines introduced to community care sites.

The defibrillators are critical to saving the lives of people who suffer sudden heart attacks by recognising abnormal rhythms using an electrical shock, if needed, to reset the heart so it beats to a normal rhythm.

Megan Clemence, Trust Resuscitation Lead, said: “The Trust has made a major contribution to the update of emergency defibrillators across the acute hospital and patient transport. This maintains our compliance with national standards.

“We have installed the best possible high-tech equipment in the right places to give anyone who has a sudden cardiac arrest the best chance of having emergency life-saving treatment as quickly as possible.”

National guidelines say defibrillation (restarting the heart) should be done within three minutes of someone collapsing with a cardiac arrest in order to increase chances of survival, reduce the chances of long-term brain damage by reducing the time the brain is starved of oxygen and overall, improve outcomes for patients.

She said this emergency provision is combined with the training of hundreds of staff who will be able to use new equipment: “The new defibrillators are intuitive to use and have voice prompts to aid the user in pressurised incidents, thereby reducing user error. They have improved functions covering speed and depth of compressions following clinical guidelines which promotes good patient recovery outcomes.”

You can join us on our social media pages, follow us on Facebook or Twitter and keep up to date with whats going on in South Devon.

Got a news story, blog or press release that you’d like to share or want to advertise with us? Contact us

Related Posts

The Create Growth Programme returns to Torbay and Devon
Community News

The Create Growth Programme returns to Torbay and Devon

May 8, 2025
Community News

Have you seen Torbay man wanted by police?

May 8, 2025
How Torquay Votes
Community News

How Torquay Votes

May 8, 2025
Devon woman wins national business award
Community News

Devon woman wins national business award

May 7, 2025
Community News

No Mow May: How letting your lawn grow helps local wildlife

May 7, 2025
Community News

From city streets to sandy shores – Finding community in Torquay

May 7, 2025
  • Home
  • All News
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Submit an article

© 2023 We Are South Devon Brought to you by Griffiths Networking

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • All News
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Submit an article

© 2023 We Are South Devon Brought to you by Griffiths Networking