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Mobile Phone Application Will Help Save Lives

The phone app is available to download for residents.

Your local fire department wants your phone to help save lives. A new, free mobile phone application called "Pulsepoint" is now available to residents.

The app includes the Alameda County Fire Department, Livermore Pleasanton Fire Department, Fremont Fire Department and Alameda Fire.


On Thursday, fire chiefs from the four departments, unveiled Pulsepoint.

"This is arguably the greatest technological innovation toward saving lives since CPR [cardiopulmonary resuscitation] was introduced," said Interim Chief Demetrious Shaffer of the Alameda County Fire Department.

"We are here to introduce Pulsepoint to the community," said Shaffer. "This is designed to support communities."

Shaffer said a public service announcement has been created for television to spread the word about the new app.

Pulsepoint is a free phone application for smart phones to engage bystanders trained in cardiopulmonary resuscitation or CPR to encourage them to render aid in cases of cardiac arrest.

"Bystander CPR" is the goal of the emergency notification to get CPR trained citizens to respond to nearby cardiac arrests. The notification is only sent if the event is happening in a public place.

Shaffer says over 350 thousand people die annually from cardiac arrest and in Alameda County, bystander CPR is administered less than 25 percent of the time.

"In cases of cardiac arrest, for every minute that passes, there is a ten percent drop in survival rate," said Shaffer. "There are 300 million people trained in CPR."

According to Shaffer, Automated External Defibrillators or "AEDs" are used less than three percent of the time during these emergerncies, despite the availablity of the lifesaving tool. There are more 1200 AEDs in Alameda County with more to come.

Fire Chief Richard Price of the San Ramon Fire Department says it was not long ago when he learned someone nearby could have used his life-saving skills.

"I learned too late that someone was having a cardiac arrest right next door to me," he said. "The Pulsepoint app is used to alert nearby good Samaritans simultaneously with emergency responders."

Price says the app also notifies users of AED units nearby the emergency. The application was made possible by WorkDay, a software service company in Pleasanton.

"Thirty thousand people have already downloaded the phone application," commented Price. "Pulsepoint is available to all of Alameda County at no cost thanks to generous donations from companies like WorkDay."

Livermore Pleasanton Fire Chief Jim Miguel is encouraging everyone to get CPR trained and says CPR has been taught for 50 years in this country.

"There are hundreds of places ot get trained in addition to online options that offer CPR training," said Miguel. "For those who don't think they could give CPR, there is a new type of 'hands-only' CPR for those not comfortable with traditional CPR. Learn CPR, download the apps and make a difference in someone's life."

Download Pulsepoint by clicking here.

What do you think of the new phone application? Do you have it or are you going to download it? Tell us in the comments section below.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Julia March 6, 2013 at 06:21 pm
You cannot compare the behavior of a wild animal versus a domesticated animal.
david March 6, 2013 at 04:41 pm
No offense, but keep drinking the kool-aid. I don't think all pit bulls are dangerous anymore thanRead More I think great white sharks will get every surfer, but God knows when they bite the person being bitten is in grave trouble!
Californicated1 March 6, 2013 at 03:42 pm
Actually, Pit Bulls are one of the most well-behaved, well-trained dogs out there, to both theirRead More owners and their familes, if they are trained to be that way. Only drawback to Pits, though, is that they drool a lot, just like any other hunting dog out there. Back in 2009, there was a story in Berkeley about how a Pit Bull saved her owner's life in a house fire, and all anybody could see was that it was a Pit Bull and nothing more. If you train a dog to have a nice and sweet disposition, guess what, the dog will have a nice and sweet disposition. And if you train a dog to fight, maim and kill, guess what it's gonna do? Doesn't matter the breed. I've known Dachshunds who were mean and resorted to biting in an instant as I have known Pit Bulls who were nice--but slobbered a lot. And about the only reason that Pits have the reputation that they do out there is more to do with the viewpoint of the person who believes that all Pits are dangerous to begin with and that perhaps one of their other biases may be a work here, like they hate people whom they believe to be "trash" or "thugs" perhaps, but that's more an indication of their prejudice than their experience with these dogs or any other breed out there. I've known Springer Spaniels out there that started out as sweet dogs with nice dispositions, but as they aged and their brians atrophied into cancer, they turned into vicious dogs and had to be put down. Like people, dogs are individuals, too.