ANNOUNCER:
But A-E-D's don't take the place of cardio pulmonary resuscitation. Sometimes CPR is still needed to save a life - classes like this teach you to recognize those circumstances.
Scott Caruthers, AED and CPR Instructor:
It's a tango. Sometimes the person doing CPR will be of paramount importance, where the heart needs to be revitalized, re-imbued with oxygen-rich blood. And then only will it be able to receive and convert that electrical shock into a life-sustaining rhythm.
ANNOUNCER:
The American Heart Association estimates that automated electronic defibrillators could save as many as 50,000 lives a year if they were more widely used. Experts say learning how to use them is simple.
Scott Caruthers, AED and CPR Instructor :
The machine is smarter than we are. It's a doc in the box. You simply react to the prompts provided you by this machine.
Vijay Luthra, AED & CPR Class Participant:
Even if you were using it for the first time, I think it would -- it would kind of walk you through it.
ANNOUNCER:
Thanks for joining us on today's Once Daily.