February 13, 2001

WSU professor to study whether use of defibrillators in public places saves lives

Meijer stores, museums to serve as study sites

Almost everyone has seen defibrillators on TV: A patient suffers a heart attack, so a doctor rubs together two paddles, yells "clear!" and places the paddles on a patient's chest to administer a shock that jumpstarts the heart back into its normal rhythm. Now a safe, low-energy version of this medical instrument could save a life in a store near you.

Robert Zalenski, MD, director of clinical research and associate professor of emergency medicine, is leading the Michigan branch of nationwide research study to determine whether more people who have cardiac arrests in public would be more likely to be saved by lay people using defibrillators or CPR within three minutes.

About one-fourth of the 300,000 people who die from cardiac arrest annually are outside the home.

"Sudden death from cardiac arrest really is a terrible plague, and this study could help to find ways to address it," Dr. Zalenski said.

As part of the two-and-a-half year study, which is coordinated by the University of Washington at Seattle, employees of 40 Meijer stores, the Museum of African-American History and the Detroit Institute of Arts will be instructed to use defibrillators or rapid-response CPR in the case of cardiac arrest. The defibrillators will receive four instruments so that they will be within a three-minute reach of anywhere in the store.

The Michigan sites, which will be throughout the metro-Detroit as well as Flint, Lansing, Grand Rapids and Jackson, were chosen based on the volume of people who visit them. Sites that large generally have an excellent choice, Dr. Zalenski said, because the store already trains employees to administer CPR within three minutes of a cardiac arrest.

"Meijer already had demonstrated a commitment to the safety and care of its customers," Dr.Zalenski said. "Many stores may keep the flies off you while they call 911, but Meijer-of its own volition-developed a program in the interest of public health.

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