The Sudden Cardiac Arrest Foundation is dedicated to bringing you the latest news and developments in sudden cardiac arrest prevention and treatment.

Take a Stand Against Sudden Cardiac Arrest

You Are Invited! The Sudden Cardiac Arrest Coalition will host an event to raise awareness on Capitol Hill during National SCA Awareness Month in October.  The event will take place at the Rayburn House Office Building foyer in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, October 26, from 4-6 pm. All interested parties are invited to attend.  "Please help us… Read More

Public Awareness About AEDs Discouragingly Low

Widespread public education campaigns needed AMSTERDAM—Most laypersons are unfamiliar with automated external defibrillators (AEDs) and would be unwilling to use them to help victims of sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), according to Patrick Schober, MD, PhD, and colleagues at the VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Public… Read More

Give $25 or More on Tuesday, 10-4

The Pittsburgh Foundation will amplify contributions to the Sudden Cardiac Arrest Foundation on October 4th, the Day of Giving PITTSBURGH–Donate $25 or more to the Sudden Cardiac Arrest Foundation on Tuesday, October 4th, and your gift will be maximized through a portion of the match pool provided by The Pittsburgh Foundation. Your donation will… Read More

People in Poorer Neighborhoods Have Higher Risk of Sudden Cardiac Arrest

Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) was higher among people living in poorer neighborhoods in several US and Canadian cities, and the disparity was particularly evident among people under age 65, found a study in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. SCA accounts for up to 63% of deaths annually from cardiac diseases in the United States. Socio-… Read More

Former Steeler Survives SCA

Former Steelers undrafted free agent S. Brett Greenwood was hospitalized Friday in Iowa City, Iowa, after collapsing during a workout in Bettendorf, Iowa. Greenwood suffered an apparent sudden cardiac arrest arrest. Greenwood, who was released by the Steelers in part of their final roster cuts, was at his high school alma mater, Pleasant Valley,… Read More

NIH Funded Study Demonstrates that Patients Treated with New CPR Devices and Cooling Have Improved Long-Term Brain Function Following Cardiac Arrest

ROSEVILLE, Minn.-- Today, Advanced Circulatory Systems Inc. (ACSI) announced results from a large, NIH-funded clinical trial comparing standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to a new method of CPR that provides greater protection to the heart and brain when the heart stops beating (cardiac arrest). Their new device combination, called the… Read More

NEJM: Using an Impedance Device During CPR Does Not Improve Survival

Use of an impedance threshold device (ITD) has been shown to enhance cardiac output during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR); however, a study published Sept. 1 in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that use of these devices may not improve survival among patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest who received standard CPR. “One… Read More

North Olmstead, Ohio, Police Receive Grant for AEDs

NORTH OLMSTED, OHIO--Lifesaving technology could soon be riding along with the city’s police cruisers. North Olmsted police have received a $10,500 grant from Fairview Hospital and the Cleveland Clinic Foundation to purchase and install automated external defibrillators in seven police cruisers. Safety Director Scott Thomas, who spearheaded the… Read More

Studies: Increasing Complications for Pacemakers and ICDs

NEW YORK– Implantation of cardiac implantable electrophysiological devices (CIED) is associated with increasing rates of complications and mortality, according to results of 3 studies published in the August 23rd online Journal of the American College of Cardiology. There have been dramatic increases in the implantation of these devices, largely… Read More

World’s Largest Cardiac Arrest Trial Shows Longer Period of Initial CPR by Paramedics and Firefighters Provides No Benefit

 A study involving nearly 10,000 cardiac arrest patients from 10 North American regions has shown that extending the period of initial cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) by paramedics and firefighters from one to three minutes provides no benefit. The study, led by Dr. Ian Stiell of the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI), the University of… Read More