Posted on 02/16/2012

A bill, sponsored by New Jersey State Senators Bob Gordon (D-38 Fair Lawn) and Joseph F. Vitale (D-Middlesex) that would protect good Samaritans who use an automated external defibrillator (AED) while attempting to save someone’s life from civil liability was approved by the full Senate on Monday and is now scheduled for a vote in the Assembly on Thursday.  

The bill, S-852, would eliminate language in current law that requires that a person using an AED to have received training in both CPR and the usage of the AED.  The bill would also step down current requirements that entities require CPR and AED training for all people who might use the AED to just the people most likely to use the device.

“With technological advances, an automated external defibrillator is nearly foolproof and actually walks a person through the steps to administering a defibrillation,” said Senator Gordon (D-Bergen/Passaic).  “Our current laws have not kept up with these advances and can punish those who in good faith attempt to save someone’s life.  By correcting this antiquated law we can encourage organizations to acquire AEDs which may in turn mean the difference of life and death for someone in sudden cardiac arrest.”

The bill would provide immunity from civil liability to any layperson who uses an AED and fails, in good faith, to request emergency medical assistance as soon as practical.  It would also provide immunity to the organization that has acquired the AED.  The Senators note, that with advancements in technology, AEDs are virtually foolproof and are designed to walk someone who may never have used the device through the steps to safely save someone’s life.  Current devices speak the instructions, step-by-step, and will only administer a defibrillation if the victim needs it.

This bill is in direct response to feedback from the John Taylor Babbitt Foundation whose mission is make sure that an AED is available near all public assemblies.  The Foundation fundraises to purchase and donate AEDs to public entities throughout New Jersey.  They have found that some organizations such as churches, youth recreation leagues and schools will not accept a donated AED because of the increased liability they assume.    According to JoAnne Babbitt, the Vice-President of the Foundation, for each AED they donate, there are eight to ten that are rejected by the public entity because of liability concerns.

“For someone in cardiac arrest, early access to defibrillation is key to saving his or her life,” said Senator Vitale, (D-Middlesex) Chairman of the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee. “Organizations are currently fearful of acquiring these life-saving defibrillators because it opens them up to liability concerns including lawsuits.  This legislation updates the law to protect those good Samaritans who go out of their way to try and save someone in cardiac arrest.”

In the United States, more than 300,000 people are victims of sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) each year – a condition where the heart’s electrical system malfunctions and stops pumping blood to the rest of the body, often without any visible symptoms.  According to the Cleveland Clinic, if a heart in sudden cardiac arrest is defibrillated within the first minute, there is a 90 percent chance that the patient will survive. 

Survival rates decrease 10 percent for every minute a person in SCA waits to be defibrillated.  Due to a lack of access to AEDs, currently only five percent of people in SCA survive.  Early defibrillation is the most critical step for survival for someone experiencing SCA.

An automated external defibrillator is a portable device that is used to restore heart rhythms to patients in cardiac arrest. It automatically analyzes the heart rhythm of the patient and advises the user whether or not a defibrillation is needed to return the patient to a normal heart beat.

SOURCE: RiverDell Patch

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