MARTHA SHANAHAN ON JAN 23, 2017
SOURCE: MCCLATCHY

Jan. 19--NEW LONDON -- A Connecticut College campus security officer may have saved a life Tuesday when he used an automatic external defibrillator device on a colleague who was having a heart attack.

Eric Roode, who has worked for the college for almost 11 years, responded to a call in a campus dorm Tuesday morning. There he found a 68-year-old man, another employee of the college, showing signs of a heart attack.

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The college several years ago had installed multiple AEDs, automated external defibrillators, which restore normal heart rhythm to people having a heart attack. Roode said he has gone through regular training to use them, but never found himself in a situation where he could use one to save someone's life. The devices used in public places deliver audible instructions for the user.

 

"I felt pretty confident," he said. "It pretty much walks you through."

 

New London Fire Department Battalion Chief Edward Sargent said an ambulance and fire engine arrived shortly after Roode used the AED to deliver two shocks to the man, and was administering CPR.

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New London emergency personnel took over, and on their way to the hospital, the man began breathing and regained a pulse. By Tuesday evening he was awake and talking, Sargent said.

 

A doctor told Sargent that the two shocks that Roode gave the man's heart with the AED were the reason he's alive.