New Users Registration  |  Set as Homepage  |  FAQ  |  Site Map 
 
Go Search
   

Skip Navigation LinksHealth Xchange > News
  News  
  Categories  
     
  Chronology  
 
  2012   May 2012Apr 2012Mar 2012 | Feb 2012 | Jan 2012 |
  2011   Dec 2011Nov 2011Oct 2011 | Sep 2011 | Aug 2011Jul 2011Jun 2011 | May 2011 | Apr 2011 | Mar 2011 | Feb 2011 | Jan 2011 |
  2010   Dec 2010 | Nov 2010 | Oct 2010 | Sep 2010 | Aug 2010 | Jul 2010 | Jun 2010 | May 2010 | Apr 2010 | Mar 2010 | Feb 2010 | Jan 2010 |
  2009   Dec 2009 | Nov 2009 | Oct 2009 | Sep 2009 | Aug 2009 |
 
     
  Topic  
 
  Health Policy and Announcements | Diseases and Outbreaks
  Medical Research | New Treatments and Technology
   
 
     
  RSS  
 
  Singapore   SingHealth | Health Promotion Board | Ministry of Health | Asiaone
  International   World Health Organization | Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (US)
       
 
     
 Ask the Specialists (1st - 31st May)
     
Colon Cancer
Seize this chance to ask any question you might have regarding colon cancer. Our expert is here to help.
     
  Pain Management
If you have questions related to managing your chronic pain, take this opportunity to ask our expert today.
     
Chest Pain: The Answers
Age-Related Eye Conditions: The Answers
     
 
 ADVERTISEMENT
     
 

 
     
 
 Stay in Touch With Health Xchange
 
  facebook   twitter  
 
 
 Useful Numbers
     
  Singapore General Hospital
Tel: (65) 6222 3322
 
  KK Women's and Children's Hospital
Tel:(65) 6225 5554
 
  National Cancer Centre Singapore
Tel: (65) 6436 8000
 
  National Heart Centre Singapore
Tel: (65) 6436 7800
 
  Singapore National Eye Centre
Tel: (65) 6227 7255
 
  National Dental Centre Singapore
Tel: (65) 6324 8910
 
 

National Neuroscience Institute
Tel: (65) 6357 7153

 
     
 
  News Article  
 

10 places for life-saving machines

 
  Tuesday, 19 l 07 l 2011  Source: The Straits Times   
By: Grace Chua
     

 

 

Devices at key locations can help lower heart attack deaths

AED-machinePUTTING machines that jump-start patients’ hearts in 10 key locations around the island could save the lives of more than 30 cardiac-arrest victims every year, according to a senior emergency medicine consultant. Professor Marcus Ong of the Singapore General Hospital carried out research into the best places to install the devices, called automated external defibrillators or AEDs. They include Changi Airport, the Subordinate Courts and tourist hot spots such as Sentosa and the Night Safari. Prof Ong believes the devices can save lives only if they are accessible to the public, saying: “It’s not enough just to have (them) if they’re locked away in a security office somewhere.”

More people should be trained to use the machines, he added. This is because bystanders are present in more than half of cardiac-arrest cases. With the proper training, they could mean the difference between life and death. Every year, more than 1,000 cardiac arrests happen in Singapore. Only 2.7 per cent of victims survive – compared to nearly 20 per cent in the United States, Europe and Japan.

To help save lives, at least 280 AEDs are already installed across the island, according to a voluntary registry kept by the Singapore Heart Foundation. They tend to be located in places such as sports centres and cinemas. The defibrillators cost between $2,500 and $3,000 each, which means placing them everywhere is not practical. Prof Ong scoured the cardiac-arrest statistics from 2001 to 2004 to find the locations where they most occur. At all of the 10 places he identified, at least one person had suffered a cardiac arrest – which means the heart stops beating properly – in five years. This threshold is based on guidelines by the American Heart Association.

Although more than 70 per cent of cardiac arrests in Singapore happen at home, Prof Ong explained it would not be practical to have a defibrillator in every household. It does make sense, however, to put them in high-risk areas, such as those where a lot of elderly people live. For example, Toa Payoh’s Kim Keat precinct last year became the first to have a defibrillator installed. Some residents were trained to use it. Some of the locations Prof Ong highlighted already have the devices, or are planning to install them, a check by The Straits Times found. All Singapore Civil Defence Force ambulances have them. And last month, Changi Airport Group called a tender to supply the life-saving gadgets at its four terminals. The deadline for bids has been extended “due to requests by multiple interested suppliers”, said a note on government procurement website GeBIZ. Sentosa, Suntec International Convention and Exhibition Centre, and the integrated resorts also have publicly accessible defibrillators. Yet buildings are not legally required to have the machines, and there are no guidelines on where to put them.

Asked if there should be a legal requirement, Professor V. Anantharaman, chair of the National Resuscitation Council, said that education and awareness were the most important things. “Whether we have a law or not, what is more important is that people be educated about cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and the proper use of AEDs, and that combining CPR and AEDs can help more people to survive.”

In January, then Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan announced a target of training one million people in CPR by 2020. Over the past few years, the demand for CPR training has gone up. Last year, it rose by a quarter, said the Singapore Heart Foundation. Prof Ong plans to present his research at an emergency medicine conference in Greece in September. “(Surviving cardiac arrest) should not be luck,” he said. “There should actually be a system in place. Such things occur in predictable patterns, so you can identify these places, and put in place solutions.”

Life-saving locations

THESE are the 10 best places to install automated external defibrillators, according to Professor Marcus Ong. He based his research on data from 2,428 patients, collected between 2001 and 2004.

  • Changi Airport LSubordinate Courts
  • Singapore Turf Club
  • Chua Chu Kang Cemetery
  • Inside SCDF ambulances LImmigration checkpoints
  • Sentosa
  • The Night Safari
  • Ferry terminals
  • Nursing homes and homes for the aged