With 160,000 people dying in the United States each year from sudden cardiac arrest outside of hospitals, Carver County has launched a program to put defibrillators -- devices that can revive many heart attack patients -- just a heartbeat away.
Carver has set out to map the precise location of every defibrillator in the county, at sites ranging from schools to fitness centers, so emergency workers can get them to heart attack victims as quickly as possible.
Thus far, the county has identified 137 defibrillators at 87 sites. The locations are available to anyone who calls 911 dispatchers, be they rescue personnel or average citizens. The locations, denoted by a small heart, are also listed on a map on the county's website.
"We tried to capture every one that's out there to get them on the database," said Carver County Administrator Dave Hemze. "That was a fundamental issue. All of these various groups have them, but no one had coordinated a broad look at where they are."
The program, called "Saving Hearts in Our Communities," recently received an award for innovation from the University of Minnesota's Humphrey Institute.
It was started by the Carver County Health Department, law enforcement officials and rescue workers as a way to put automated external defibrillators (AED) in every squad car, fire vehicle and public building in the county as soon as possible, and make them readily available to the public.
The goal is to make the devices, which shock the heart back into a normal rhythm, as common as fire extinguishers and just as easy to operate.
"Carver County likes to try to be innovative," said Sheriff's Deputy Mike Wollin, who used an AED last year to save the life of a 33-year-old Edina man. "We have fire extinguishers in every car. Why not AEDs?"