"School staffers save life with portable defibrillator." July 12, 2007. NYSUT: A Union of Professionals. www.nysut.org
NYSUT - A Union of Professionals
  
 

School staffers save life with portable defibrillator

 

AED defibrillator logoThis story's ending never gets old: Another life was saved because of an Automated External Defibrillator and a speedy response by NYSUT members.

Before May 2 became "an incredible day and a miracle," as Canandaigua Teachers Association member Shelley Sossong later called it, it was a morning for working on writing skills. Sossong's fifth-graders in the Finger Lakes school silently worked on their essays when she noticed one of her students slowly slumping out of his seat.

"Out of the corner of my eye, I saw my student tipping," Sossong recounted.

Luckily, he landed on a pile of foam mats instead of the hard floor. When Sossong rushed to his side, his body gulped for air.

Cognizant that the boy had a heart condition, Sossong knew she needed help - fast. She sent students running in all directions to assemble members of the school's emergency response team, which included school nurse Cecelia Munn.

Canandaigua Elementary has a volunteer group of about a dozen staffers trained to cope with disasters.

"Shelley, the initial responder, was on her game," Munn said. "She immediately sensed that something was really wrong." Also helping in the crisis were teachers Bruce Hawkins and Dick Valvano.

When help arrived, the student's breathing had stopped and his pulse was non-existent. Munn said the chances of surviving those conditions are slim.

The response team shocked him with the school's AED. It temporarily revived his normal rhythm. But his heart failed a second time. The defibrillator signaled for another shock. The emergency team administered it and kept the boy stable until the Emergency Medical Services unit arrived.

2002 law

AEDs became mandatory in New York schools with a 2002 state law that NYSUT advocated after fervent lobbying by Port Jervis TA member, Rachel Moyer, who had lost her son to heart failure. Greg Moyer, 15, died during a high school basketball game just across the border in Pennsylvania. Moyer and NYSUT leaders believe a defibrillator would have saved Greg's life.

"Even if an AED is only used once, that's enough," Sossong said. "We (Canandaigua schools) have (the defibrillators), but you never really think you are going to use them on a child."

While it is best to have trained professionals operate defibrillators, Munn said, they are designed so someone with no experience could work them.

"It has an automated voice that directs you and leads the rhythm and tells you when to initiate CPR or when to shock," Munn explained. "The commands are very simple so that anyone can use it."

The training is one thing; an actual emergency is another. "If you've never done it before, it is totally different when it is a real person," Munn said.

She said a nurse's expertise is valuable to help manage volunteers through a crisis - and make tough decisions.

"When school nurses enter the room, they have been trained to make an assessment and make it quick," Munn stated. "New York state needs to consider mandating school nurses (requiring a nurse in every school building)."

It took a team effort to save the student's life that Wednesday.

"It was one of those situations that you couldn't have done it alone," Munn said. "I knew that there were people ready to assist me."

- Andrew Waite