Two Flagstaff police officers rush over to a man lying on a sidewalk. He is bleeding and screaming, then quickly loses consciousness. The officers assess the situation, check for safety concerns, apply a tourniquet to stop the bleeding, and begin resuscitation efforts. They know that trauma and significant blood loss can lead to cardiac arrest. Dispatch tells the officers that emergency medical service is eight minutes away.
It looks all too real, but this is a drill.
“We’re running through scenarios that officers will actually encounter on the job,” said Tim Freund, a SWAT medic and director of training for Griffith Blue Heart, an Arizona-based nonprofit. “Our training is pertinent, relevant, and realistic.”
With a grant from Health First Foundation, Griffith Blue Heart is equipping and instructing Flagstaff police officers in high-performance resuscitation. Survival increases when officers know how to respond effectively in cardiac, bleeding, drowning, overdose, and other urgent situations. Response time is critical in cardiac arrest, and police officers out in the community typically arrive at such priority 911 calls before EMS professionals.
“Seconds count; seconds matter,” said Lt. Charles Hernandez II of the Flagstaff Police Department. “This training will significantly impact our capabilities and response to emergency situations. It will enable us to better serve the community and save lives.”
Hernandez said Flagstaff police respond to an emergency with an unresponsive person three to five times a day and are likely to use the training from the get-go.
Along with the training, the grant provides 54 automatic external defibrillators (AEDs) for Flagstaff police patrol vehicles. When someone is in cardiac arrest, these medical devices can analyze a heart rhythm and, if needed, deliver an electrical shock to help the heart reestablish an effective rhythm.
“High-performance resuscitation paired with rapid defibrillation will mitigate chronic health conditions, taking on the leading cause of death, heart disease,” said Brandon Griffith, a decorated law enforcement officer. He founded Griffith Blue Heart in 2014 after surviving a sudden cardiac arrest.
Cardiac arrest occurs when the heart suddenly stops pumping and blood stops flowing to the brain and other vital organs. A person in cardiac arrest loses consciousness, stops breathing or is breathing ineffectively.
“These cases require rapid defibrillation and CPR, or the chance of survival is next to nothing,” Griffith said. “For every minute you wait to start CPR, the chance of survival goes down 10 percent.”
Health First Foundation directs grant funding to northern Arizona’s top health priorities. This program addresses two priorities – chronic health conditions and access to care.
Officer Griffith emphasizes that sudden cardiac arrest can strike any person of any age at any time, regardless of health status. According to the American Heart Association, more than 356,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests occur annually in the U.S. With a fatality rate of 90%, more can be done to save lives.
Health First Foundation is proud to support the Griffith Blue Heart mission to increase cardiac arrest survival.
Mailing Address
PO Box 1832
Flagstaff AZ 86002