A 55 year old man at my mom's work died of either a heart attack or stroke yesterday in the cafeteria. My mom called 911 while others tried CPR. Despite many heros that day, just like that - he's gone. HR is trying to contact all the people who helped and get some kind of therapy for them. Needless to say, my mom is a mess right now.
But it got me thinking. How much training do you get at work for if something like that was to happen? Do you have an AED (automated external defibrillator) or CPR training?
DH's first reaction, "Of all places, please don't let me die at work."
Re: emergency prep at work
Yikes! That is sad.
We have an AED in our building and they offer training on it twice a year. I am CPR certified but it's not through work, just on my own.
We are about a 3 minute walk from a hospital ER though
Yeah, I work in a hospital. You cough the wrong way walking down the hall and 20 MDs are all over you.
It just got me thinking that it's one of the perks I never really thought about. Dying at work would be a challange for me.
met DH 1995 ~ married DH 2006 ~ completed our family 2008
Life is good!
On the other hand, doctors have the worst health habits. Outside the ER there are always a ton of drs smoking. And I work above the office of a major insurance co and it's the same thing, I think probably 50% of their employees smoke. I only know of 2 at my co.
I couldn't agree with you more. You should see our numbers for the % of staff who don't wash hands between each patient or refuse to get the flu shot. Nevermind the junk we feed patients and staff in the cafeteria. Not really setting good examples, but we can fix what ever is wrong with the guy in the next office.
met DH 1995 ~ married DH 2006 ~ completed our family 2008
Life is good!
That's so sad.
We have a defibrillator and quite a few people know CPR.
My sister lost a co-worker in a similar manner. They found her unresponsive in her cubicle. It was too late.
Yes, but I work in the OR, so we could pop in a breathing tube, start some great IVs, even put someone on bypass. Where I work is pretty much the best place to have a life threatening event.
I used to teach CPR in college for the American Heart Association, and many big firms would hire me to come in and teach for any interested employees.