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Racing Hearts can make the difference between life and death

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Stephanie Martinson, center, founded Racing Hearts in 2012 after suffering an aborted sudden cardiac arrest when she was 23. Racing Hearts has since placed more than 1,000 automated external defibrillators (AEDs) in public locations in Santa Clara County. Martinson is pictured with her Racing Hearts team, from left, Ryan Crowley, Stephanie Hall, Rachele Acuna-Narvaev and Sara Martinson. (Courtesy photo)




Racing Hearts is a lifesaver.

In just 10 years, they’ve placed more than 1,000 automated external defibrillators (AEDs) within Santa Clara County, and they’ve made Santa Clara County the first county in California to have defibrillators in virtually all public schools. It’s an outstanding example of the good that nonprofits and government can do when we work hand in hand.

And what a journey it’s been.

Two decades ago, Stephanie Martinson was out climbing Yosemite’s Half Dome when she suffered an aborted sudden cardiac arrest. She was just 23 years old.

Stephanie was not the first young adult, and she won’t be the last, to experience sudden cardiac arrest. We hear too many stories of otherwise healthy people collapsing suddenly. Maybe it’s a student at sports practice, a friend at work or a neighbor at a farmers’ market. It can happen to anyone, anytime, anywhere.

Sudden cardiac arrest is not the same as a heart attack, but it’s just as dangerous. Instead of a blockage, it’s an electrical disturbance that stops the heart beating correctly.

After her ordeal, Stephanie was inspired to do something. In 2012, she founded Racing Hearts with a clear mission: to increase the survival rate of people suffering a sudden cardiac arrest. How would she and her volunteer team get that done? By placing AEDs in easy to access locations throughout the community, and by teaching people how to use them.

An AED is a small but powerful device. It uses electrical pulses to reset the heart, like turning a frozen computer off and on again. “Public access” AED models, like the ones placed through our partnership with Racing Hearts, are easy to use and capable of defibrillating a cardiac patient before the ambulance arrives.

There are more than 350,000 cases of sudden cardiac arrest each year in the U.S. — 7,000 of them children under age 18 — and nearly 90% are fatal. The survival rate for those experiencing this kind of cardiac event is 5%-8% when traditional cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is used but increases to 80% with the use of AEDs. Clearly, having AEDs widely available makes a huge difference between life and death.

In 2014, I proposed that Racing Hearts partner with the county’s Board of Supervisors, the City of Mountain View, El Camino Health and local school districts to place 49 AEDs in public locations throughout Mountain View, including schools and recreation/community centers.

Following the success of the Mountain View pilot, in 2015 the Board of Supervisors allocated $500,000 in matching funds to get even more AEDs out into the community, including county park ranger and sheriff patrol cars in Cupertino and Saratoga along with Los Gatos-Monte Sereno police cars. Soon after, Racing Hearts, the county and El Camino Health collaborated with our local state legislators to update California legislation to make it easier to own and maintain AEDs.

By 2018, Santa Clara County was the first county in California to have AEDs in virtually all public schools, spread among elementary, middle and high schools, including those in Cupertino, Saratoga, Los Gatos and Monte Sereno. When we started our partnership with Racing Hearts, fewer than 10% of our local public schools had access to the equipment.

To have placed more than 1,000 AEDs in Santa Clara County is a triumph, to put it simply. After completing their mission to raise awareness and blanket our county with lifesaving AEDs, Racing Hearts’ journey has recently come to a natural close. I’m honored to have worked with Racing Hearts from day one, and I hope the Racing Hearts story continues to inspire partnerships between nonprofits, local organizations and government.

Thank you, Racing Hearts. You’re a lifesaver.

Joe Simitian is a member of the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors, where he serves as chair of the county’s Health and Hospital Committee. 

 


Originally published at Joe Simitian
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