Patrol Car AED Saves Wisconsin
Police Officer
March 7, 2007
Patrol Car AED Saves Wisconsin Police Officer Growing number of
patrol cars now carry the life-saving device It was 10:35 a.m. on a
Sunday when John Schanning collapsed in his Waterford home after a
regular workout at the gym. He quickly lost consciousness.
Schanning, his town's only police officer, was lucky.
His wife saw him fall and called 911. A Racine County sheriff's deputy
was patrolling nearby, and he had a defibrillator in his squad car that
had been acquired just the week before.
Schanning still had a pulse when the defibrillator paddles were hooked
up to his chest, but within minutes, he had lost his pulse and wasn't
breathing.
"According to the records, I was dead for over two minutes," Schanning
said. "They hit me (shocked him with the defibrillator) twice, and my
heart started beating again. I died again on the table in the emergency
room, and they hit me four more times."
Schanning believes that the defibrillator - a $1,500 piece of equipment
that is becoming more common in police cars - saved his life that
morning several years ago.
While most local fire departments have defibrillators in rescue
vehicles, an increasing number of area law enforcement agencies also are
placing the units in squad cars. About half of the police departments in
the Milwaukee area have defibrillators, and at least two others - the
Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office and the Glendale Police Department -
are requesting funding for next year.
"So often, we are the first to arrive on the scene,"
said Kim Brooks, speaking for Milwaukee County Sheriff David A. Clarke
Jr. "We have one in the courthouse and one at the airport, and we have
saved lives because they were there."
Tom Aufderheide, a professor of emergency medicine at the Medical
College of Wisconsin, said studies have shown that chances of survival
drop 10% for every minute that passes after a heart stops beating. The
use of defibrillators is "a proven lifesaving method,"
he said.
The devices are easy to use. The instructions are on the machine, and if
a patient has a heartbeat, the machine will tell the user that
defibrillation is not advised and will not work. Police officers usually
are trained in use of the device at the same time they learn
cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Several departments that do not have the equipment in squad cars say
their officers are trained to use it because the devices are commonly
placed in schools and other public buildings.
Those who support having the devices in police cars say officers usually
arrive before fire vehicles.
Police also often know the community better than fire department or
private ambulance personnel would, backers say. Those who have not
bought the device, also known as an automated external defibrillator, or
AED, say fire departments respond just as quickly.
They also note that the equipment needs special care and that officers
need training to operate it.
Aufderheide said the Milwaukee County paramedic program is rated among
the best in the country; in addition, the City of Milwaukee private
ambulance service was ranked as the third-best of major cities in the
country in a study done in 2003 based on response times and the survival
rate of those who went into full cardiac arrest.
Police Lt. Terry Zimmerman of Shorewood, which is served by the North
Shore Fire Department, said he has never seen a situation in the
community in which a defibrillator was needed by a police officer.
West Allis Deputy Police Chief Michael Jungbluth said he was on a state
commission about three years ago and had a number of defibrillators to
distribute.
"All of them went to rural communities where the fire departments didn't
have any defibrillators or they had only one," Jungbluth said. "Some of
these rural agencies have one rescue squad that is staffed with
volunteers, and it can take 15 minutes or more to respond to a call. I
know they are a great tool, but they cost a lot of money, and we all
have budgets that are strapped right now."
Oak Creek Chief Thomas Bauer, who described his community as one-third
rural, said all the squad cars in his department have had defibrillators
for years.
"I can't think of a better use for our money," he said.
Washington County Deputy Jeff Schwitz said his department has 25 units
and has, on average, used the defibrillators seven times a year since
2000.
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