Don Fraser



Don Fraser, 78, of Maple Grove, MN, was an avid golfer and vintage car restorer. He still is today due to an AED and a quick acting rescuer. On an August afternoon last year, Don was playing golf at the Monticello Country Club. He had not been feeling well. He wasn't having chest pain and he wasn't short of breath. He had an extremely anxious feeling and just couldn't settle down. He was scared. Not knowing what to do, he called his son who called 911.

Minutes later, Don suddenly stopped talking, became unconscious and turned blue. He had stopped breathing. A quick thinking rescuer hooked up a nearby AED. The rescuer had been AED trained and recognized Don's life threatening condition. Once the AED pads were placed on Don's chest, the AED analyzed Don's heart rhythm. It was recognized as a lethal arrhythmia and the AED immediately self-charged to shock Don's heart.

Once the AED was charged, the AED told the rescuer to push the shock button delivering the shock. The first shock was not successful and the AED immediately repeated the procedure and the rescuer delivered the second shock.

A few seconds later, after the second shock, Don began breathing and his skin color returned to normal. Don soon regained consciousness and immediately started questioning the rescuer of what had just happened. Don knew something serious had just happened to him, but he wasn't sure how to explain it.

The paramedics told Don that his heart had stopped beating. The AED and rescuer saved his life. Don was transported to the hospital. Cardiologists diagnosed Don as having a heart attack, and placed a stent in one of his coronary arteries. Don has lived a normal life ever since the incident. Thanks to an AED and a trained rescuer, Don continued to restore vintage cars this past winter and is looking forward to golfing this summer.

Don's story is not unusual. He was resuscitated because his heart was shocked with an AED immediately. AEDs work and should be available where ever you see a fire extinguisher.

Mary May



On July 17, 2004, a coincidence at the Minneapolis- St. Paul International Airport turned into a dramatic, lifesaving event. The twist of fate involved two women: Mary May, a San Francisco Bay-area resident, and Leslie Meyers, a clinical specialist with Medtronic, a medical technology company and the pioneer of defi brillation, a technique that administers a shock to a stopped heart to restore the heartbeat.

The encounter began when May was waiting for her flight home to California. “I felt my face getting very cold,” she says. “After that, I don’t remember anything until more than a day later.” She had collapsed in sudden cardiac arrest, in which the heart beats erratically and then stops. The condition is usually fatal.

At the same time, Meyers was also headed home to the Bay area on the same flight as May. As Meyers walked up to the gate, she saw a crowd gathered around May’s slumped body, and people asking, “Ma’am, ma’am, are you OK?”

Meyers instructed onlookers to get the woman on the floor, check her pulse and breathing, and call 9-1-1. Then she ran to look for an automated external defi brillator (AED), and found a LIFEPAK¨ AED on a nearby wall. A small, portable electronic device, an AED enables someone with minimal training to provide a potentially lifesaving shock to a heart that has stopped beating.

After three shocks from the AED, May was unresponsive. Meyers remembers saying, “Don’t die on me. I know you want to make it.” After a fourth shock, May’s heart started beating and she began to breathe. Paramedics arrived and asked about May’s medical history. Meyers blurted out that May had a pacemaker. Then she reeled, suddenly realizing that she knew the person whose life she had just savedÑshe had assisted with implanting a pacemaker in May just a few months earlier.

Soon after May’s heart event, her pacemaker was replaced with an implantable defibrillator that is designed to monitor the heart’s rhythm and deliver a shock(s) if it detects a dangerous rhythm. While May’s story has a happy ending, not everyone is so fortunate. Every year, up to 450,000 Americans die of sudden cardiac arrest because they don’t receive defi brillation in time. This may change now that AEDs are available in many public places, schools, places of worship, and even homes. AEDs are easy to use with little training, and as May’s story illustrates, they save lives.


Jim Alexander



Las Vegas security officer saves two lives in less than one year

U.S. Air Force retiree Jim Alexander works as a security officer at Stardust Resort and Casino in Las Vegas. In less than one year, Alexander saved the lives of two casino guests: one in September 1997 and another in August 1998. In each case, Alexander used the LIFEPAK 500 AED to restart the person's heart.

As Alexander explains, "Our local medics get to our casinos quickly, but the buildings are so large and crowded sometimes it takes too long to actually reach the patient." Instead, Alexander's employer, Boyd Gaming Corp. installed AEDs in each of its seven casinos.

One shock is sometimes all it takes to restart a heart.

Alexander, one of many Boyd employees trained on the AEDs, recalls the latest incident, "We got a call that one of our guests had collapsed during a ballroom dancing contest. The man was unconscious and not breathing and bystanders had begun CPR; we immediately hooked him up to the AED, which analyzed his heart and recommended a shock. That was all it took. Before we knew it he was awake."

"I should finish the story by saying he got up and finished the contest, but that would be a bit of an exaggeration," Alexander jokes. "At least we got him feeling good enough to argue with the paramedics about going to the hospital."

Read more about AEDs in the hospitality and resort industry (PDF File) in this article from Boyd Gaming Magazine.

"No one likes to think bad things will happen to them, but you never know....Having AEDs at our casinos has elevated the standard of what's expected at other facilities."

Jim Alexander, security officer and AED user


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Note: LIFEPAK AEDs are prescription devices. AED users should be trained in CPR and use of the AED. Please consult your physician. Although not everyone can be saved from sudden cardiac arrest, studies show that survival rates can be dramatically improved with early defibrillation. For more information, please call 1.800.442.1142 or visit www.medtronic-ers.com.