The Isle of Wight Ambulance Service is asking how confident you feel in responding to someone needing lifesaving care to restart their heart this Valentine’s Day, as Laura Summers shares the story of her cardiac arrest in 2018.
In 2024, the ambulance service responded to more than 270 cardiac arrests in the community and want to remind everyone how important it is to know what to do if someone stops breathing and needs your help.
In 2018, Laura Summers, a 32-year-old teacher on the Isle of Wight, was going about her usual day when she began to feel unwell and collapsed. Her colleague contacted others who came to help, found she wasn’t breathing and luckily knowing CPR were able to start that immediately. The fantastic group that came to Laura’s aid gave CPR until the ambulance arrived.
They also knew she needed to access a defibrillator – a machine that uses electricity to shock the heart – but unfortunately the nearest one was locked. By the time they were able to access it, Laura had been without oxygen for around 8 minutes. An individual’s chances of survival can decrease by as much as 10-12% per minute when defibrillation is delayed.
In the time before the ambulance arrived, the quality of CPR given and 2 shocks from the defibrillator, were able to get Laura partially breathing. CPR continued in the ambulance as Laura was rushed to hospital and admitted into the Intensive Care Unit at St Mary’s Hospital. The diagnosis was that she may not survive and her family – including 2 young children – were told after a few days it may be time to say goodbye to her.
Laura had no previous medical conditions that explained what had caused her to go into cardiac arrest.
Incredibly, Laura began to improve and 7 days after the incident, she was well enough to be transferred to Portsmouth where she was fitted with an internal defibrillator. A day later, she returned home for her eldest son’s birthday.
Laura said:
“As a cardiac arrest survivor in the situation I was in, my chances of survival were significantly reduced by not having an unlocked defibrillator. For me the biggest message on this is defibrillators need to be unlocked and easily accessible. The more we have out there the greater the chances of survival are, and the more people aren’t scared to use them and know that whatever they do is better than doing nothing is what we need to spread.”
Anyone with a publicly accessible defibrillator should check it is registered on The Circuit (www.TheCircuit.uk) so it can be located and deployed in an emergency. Doing this helps improve access and reduce delays to life saving treatment like that given to Laura. Keeping these unlocked also helps speed up access, and despite concerns around vandalism, the number of unlocked defibrillators vandalised over the last 5 and a half years is remains low at 0.4%.
Thanks to the work of Isle of Wight Ambulance Service, its partners and numerous charities and community organisations, there are currently more than 540 registered public access defibrillators on the Isle of Wight.
Louise Walker, Head of Education and Community Response at Isle of Wight Ambulance Service, says:
“Laura’s story and that of many of the cardiac arrest survivors we see shows how important it is for there to be easy access to a defibrillator in an emergency.
“Cardiac arrest can happen to anyone, anywhere and we often hear people are worried about started chest compressions (CPR) on someone who isn’t breathing in case they hurt them. Even if you aren’t an expert, starting CPR can double someone’s chances of survival and you aren’t going to make it any worse for that person from trying.”
7 years on, Laura feels it is just as important now to raise awareness about how to help someone in cardiac arrest including amongst the children at her school who have been taught vital CPR skills by the Isle of Wight Ambulance Service team.
She adds:
“Every delay, delays a chance of survival. Every second is precious, and every minute is lifesaving. I am still here against the odds, back to work and can even see the field I collapsed in. That’s very hard but makes me realise how lucky I am to be here. If it wasn’t for the defibrillators and the knowledge of my colleagues in giving such quality CPR, I wouldn’t be here. My husband wouldn’t have a wife and my children wouldn’t have their mum.”
Speaking from experience, it’s not rocket science delivering CPR, and you don’t need to be fit to do so.
Two years ago today I dialled 999 as my husband had collapsed and stopped breathing. Under the amazing call handler’s directions I carried out chest compressions until paramedics arrived.
And I was an unfit woman of 65!
Happy to say hubby still with me and leading a normal life, and I am supported by three other ladies who did what I did, in a group set up by Louise Walker (named in the article above)
So very grateful.
Great to hear and well done.
After the rollout of the vaccines it is
important more than ever to be
switched on to know what to do.