most importantly, the information is shared with ambulance communications officers, those who take 911 calls and dispatch paramedics. they can tell 911 callers exactly where the nearest aed is and how to use it while they wait for paramedics to arrive.
so far, more than 1,000 aeds have been mapped across windsor and
essex county.
tecumseh resident ducharme and her kids, ages eight, 11, and 13, have been keeping an eye out for aeds. using the pulsepoint app on ducharme’s phone, they’ve mapped out 22 over the last eight months, more than any other single app user.
“my son is in travel hockey. there are a lot of arenas involved in that, and there are aeds in every arena,” ducharme said. she also saw aeds inside the public schools where she works and at shopping centres.
“it was a fun activity for me and my kids to go through,” she said. “it’s something so easy to do that can help a lot of people — it takes 30 seconds.
“it’s not hard and it can save lives.”
andrea ducharme and essex-windsor ems chief justin lammers are shown at the tecumseh station on monday, december 2, 2024. ducharme and her kids helped locate and add to the more than 1,000 aeds currently on the organization’s registry.
dan janisse
/
windsor star
in 2023, local aeds were used 11 times to help people experiencing cardiac arrest. last june, a device saved the life of a 61-year-old man playing racquetball at the caboto club. by the time ems arrived, the man had resumed consciousness.
“this initiative matters a lot for our community,” said lammers. “we’re doing everything we can to get ambulances to a patient’s side as quick as we can. but at the end of the day, there’s going to be a period of time that it takes for the recognition of a cardiac arrest, phoning 911, the assignment of resources, paramedics’ drive time — all of those minutes are valuable.”