by
Amanda Thambounaris, Staff Writer | June 17, 2008
House of Representatives
grants funding for
AEDs in schools
The U.S. House of Representatives has established a grant program with the Department of Education to provide schools with funding for Automated External Defibrillators.
Rep. Betty Sutton, D-OH, first brought the Josh Miller HEARTS (Helping Everyone Access Responsible Treatment in Schools) Act to Congress in December.
Sutton's hometown is Barberton, OH, where Josh Miller, a 15-year-old high school student, died of cardiac arrest while playing football for his school's team. Unfortunately, paramedics who arrived with an AED were unable to resuscitate him.

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The HEARTS Act aims to reduce the number of American children who could suffer a similar fate, by supplying schools with AEDs and training staff to use them. AEDs, according to Sutton, are the single most effective treatment for those suffering a sudden cardiac arrest.
By ensuring that schools have access to these lifesaving devices needless deaths in communities across the country will hopefully be prevented. The program will cost $220 million, according to the Congressional Budget Office.