CVMC Takes Action to Save Young Lives at Arndt and River Bend Middle Schools

HICKORY, NC – May 14, 2014 – Catawba Valley Medical Center (CVMC) has recognized the need for on-site emergency care at area middle schools, and has provided automated external defibrillators (AED) as a result. An AED is a transportable, battery-powered tool used to immediately diagnose and treat people with heart failure. River Bend and Arndt Middle Schools recently received the life-saving devices from CVMC, for use when the schools are in operation and at athletic events.

Pictured (L-R): Rachel Knighton, River Bend School Nurse, Marcus Osborne LAT, ATC, CVMC’s Director of Sports Medicine, Alicia Ferguson, River Bend Associate Principal, Carl Becker, RT(R), (CV), Director, Angiography Services at CVMC, Mike Laughter, River Bend Athletic Director, and in front, River Bend student athletes, Payton Goble and Dylan Roberts.

Pictured (L-R): Rachel Knighton, River Bend School Nurse, Marcus Osborne LAT, ATC, CVMC’s Director of Sports Medicine, Alicia Ferguson, River Bend Associate Principal, Carl Becker, RT(R), (CV), Director, Angiography Services at CVMC, Mike Laughter, River Bend Athletic Director, and in front, River Bend student athletes, Payton Goble and Dylan Roberts.

“Immediate care is imperative when someone is having a cardiac issue, most notably sudden cardiac arrest (SCA). These events happen to people of all ages when we least expect them, and being prepared is the only safety mechanism middle schools have to care for students in need,” said Carl Becker, RT(R), (CV), Director, Angiography Services at CVMC. “Having the ability to offer these devices to area middle schools puts CVMC in a great position to save even more lives in Catawba County. Working with Marcus Osborne, LAT, ATC, CVMC’s Director of Sports Medicine, we have been able to identify those schools most in need throughout the county.”

The American Heart Association reports 295,000 cases of SCA happen each year. SCA is identified as an unexpected stoppage of the heart, and requires immediate attention from an AED for survival to be possible. Established partnerships between CVMC and area school systems brought the need for AEDs to the forefront. Catawba County high schools have already been outfitted with AEDs, but the need in area middle schools still exists. CVMC gifted AEDs to Newton-Conover and Maiden Middle Schools in 2013 and provides training for school staff.

“The time is now to provide schools with these devices,” said Becker. “Throughout my 25-year career working in cardiology, I have noticed that AEDs are not always a luxury schools have available. Taking care of children needs to be a priority, and donating these AEDs should increase the likelihood that a child would survive a heart related failure, including SCA, in Catawba County.”

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