Free CPR training course in Dundalk this Saturday

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Dundalk Order of Malta are providing free CPR training to the public at their premises in Mill Street in Dundalk this Saturday from 4.30pm to 6pm.

This training is part of a national CPR awareness week run by the Order of Malta Ireland. It is called Adam’s Gift in memory of Adam McAndrew a 13 year old boy from Roscrea in Co Tipperary who passed away from sudden cardiac arrest in February of this year.

The aim of this week is to try and promote CPR in the community and help people save a life. Adam’s mum Kerry is a member of the Birr/Roscrea unit of the Order of Malta.

For more information please contact Dundalk Order of Malta on Facebook or on 0879371272 or 0879356381.

Volunteers sought in Blackrock and Haggardstown for defibrillator support group

An appeal has been issued to residents in the Blackrock and Haggardstown area to become volunteers in the Community Cardiac Responder scheme.

Spokesperson Joan McAdam stressed the importance of the scheme.

She said: We are a linked group with the National Ambulance Scheme and we are trained to respond to heart attack, stroke, choking and cardiac arrest.

“Training is free if you agree to go on a rota to be free to respond maybe once a week for a day or a night. Otherwise training is €40pp.”

Anyone who wishes to get involved is asked to contact Joan by emailing pjemcadam@gmail.com

 

Heart attack victim takes over an hour to get from Dundalk to Drogheda following ambulance breakdown

HSEambulanceA local family have hit out at the National Ambulance Service after an ambulance carrying a heart attack victim broke down on its way from Dundalk to Drogheda at the weekend.

Roseanne Duffy fell ill just after 11.20pm on Saturday night after suffering what later transpired to be a cardiac arrest. Her daughter Charlene rang for an ambulance but despite the fact one arrived within minutes, it took more than an hour for her mother to get to Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Drogheda due to complications along the way.

Ms Duffy’s other daughter Jenny told The Irish Times that they “would have been better off getting a lift.”

Jenny insists that the ambulance left Dundalk just before midnight but the NAS is insisting this actually occurred at 12.07am.

She told The Irish Times: “45 minutes later I texted my sister Charlene, who travelled in the ambulance with her, thinking they would be in the hospital and my sister said they had broken down.”

In a statement issued yesterday, the NAS confirmed that at 12.32am a warning light activated on the dashboard and the crew requested another ambulance to bring the patient to hospital. This resulted in the ambulance being pulled over, with the Duffy family believing that the engine had failed.

The statement from the ambulance service says the replacement ambulance arrived at 12.55am, “left the scene with the patient at 1.02am and arrived at the hospital at 1.10am.”

That means the journey would have taken 63 minutes.

Meanwhile, it is also reported that another emergency vehicle is off the road in Louth at present after it filled with smoke on Saturday.

There was no patient on board at the time, with the NAS confirming that this ambulance had a mechanical problem.

The NAS insists that the “capacity to respond to emergency calls has not been compromised as a result, as other vehicles are available to cover.”

Read the full story here.