Once a week, Juliet Burgess-Ray visits her local chip shop. But rather than picking up a saveloy and butty, she’s checking in on a defibrillator.
 
“I have always been interested in anything medical and helping people, so when the opportunity came up to organise a public access defibrillator for our village, Cottesmore, I jumped at the chance of being involved,” she explains.
 
Cottesmore is one of the nearly 1,900 sites in the UK which now hosts a public access defibrillator. Defibrillators are small, often briefcase-sized devices housed in yellow boxes, which can deliver an electric shock to a person in cardiac arrest, helping them to regain a normal heartbeat rhythm.
 
And they are effective, according to St John Ambulance. If someone has a cardiac arrest and both CPR and a defibrillator are used within three minutes, the chance of survival could be as high as 70%. The medical equipment is increasingly being installed in public attractions, and rural locations around the UK.
Some of the more surprising places where the lifesaving equipment has been installed include in the cubicle of a public toilet in Northamptonshire, St Paul’s Cathedral and Tintagel Castle.
 
Read the full feature here - Emergency phone box could save lives!

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Please make sure you have read and understood this disclaimer - It will be assumed that you have read prior to CHT receiving any request. CHT are not responsible for your fund raising, nor your cPAD operations, but may assist in both. CHTs only aim is to support the installation of a cPAD scheme in the most cost effective way possible adhering to Best Practice, and help save lives in your community. This website, and any downloaded information, is for information only on how to go about obtaining and installing a cPAD, and other relevant information. All copyrights and trademarks are recognised. All support for the cPAD will be undertaken by the village committee responsible and via standard manufacturers warranties. Any training organisation will only be responsible for the initial awareness training and not for the functioning or maintenance of the AED. Please do not send any monies to CHT until you have registered your scheme with us, and have agreement from the local ambulance service for the establishment of a cPAD scheme. All schemes must be registered with the local ambulance service (CHT will also undertake this or you can do via this site, but this does not remove responsibility for you to notify the local ambulance service of your AED location). 999/112 (ambulance) must always be called prior to using a cPAD equipment. VAT may be applicable if your organisation is not an eligible body as defined by HMRC. All current or historical claims for VAT will be met by the local community. All schemes will be asked to sign an agreement taking responsibility for their own fund raising and donations to CHT, and then the operation and maintenance of the cPAD equipment. All CHT provided schemes will need to manage their maintenance through the WebNoS online system as a condition of CHT support. It is your responsibility to maintain the equipment in working order and to make sure the local ambulance service is aware of this. WebNoS makes this possible and also acts as an audit trail for management of the equipment. Sites provided by CHT and not using WebNoS may be disengaged from the ambulance service CAD systems. Any web site showing defibrillator locations is for information only, and should not be used in preference to dialling 999. CHT works in close cooperation with the UK ambulance services. Always dial 999 in an emergency

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