“Keep
the Beat” Bystander CPR classes free for public
February 2006
Community-minded businesses and organizations from the area
are co-sponsoring three “Keep the Beat for the Bayou
Region” bystander CPR training events free to the general
public in March. An event will be held at the Cotillion Ballroom
at Nicholls State University in Thibodaux on March 4 with
sessions at 8 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. There will be two additional
events on March 11. The first will be at the Houma-Terrebonne
Civic Center with sessions at 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.
The second event will be held at the Morgan City Municipal
Auditorium, with sessions at 8 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.
“Keep the Beat” is a not-for-profit effort and
is open to everyone 12 years and older. Certified CPR instructors
will teach the sessions that will last approximately two hours
each.
“Keep the Beat for the Bayou Region” is seeking
to educate residents from Assumption, Lafourche, St. Mary
and Terrebonne Parishes in basic life-saving techniques. These
parishes lie in south Louisiana, an area with one the highest
incidences of heart disease in the industrialized world, where
sudden cardiac arrest is a frequent event and many in the
area don’t know how to perform CPR.
“I believe this event should have a major impact on
the survival of those patients who experience a sudden cardiac
death,” said Dr. Peter Fail, Houma cardiologist and
medical director of the Terrebonne Parish event. “Bystander
CPR is the first and probably the most important link in the
chain of survival.”
That chain of survival includes early contact with a 911 operator,
the administration of CPR, defibrillation and advanced care
for the patient.
To provide another link in this chain, “Keep the Beat”
also sponsors a school competition and raises funds for the
donation of an Automated External Defibrillator (AED) to be
donated to the winning school. These portable, electronic,
life-saving units are simple devices that give the user step-by-step
verbal instructions. The combination of CPR and use of an
AED greatly increases a victim’s chance for survival,
because these steps can be taken prior to the arrival of a
professional medical team.
Throughout the country, communities that offer free CPR training
courses are experiencing strong turnouts for similar events.
But more importantly, they are also finding the classes are
yielding their intended goal: Attendees have gone on to use
the knowledge they have gained to save lives. The use of effective
bystander CPR nearly doubles a victim’s chance for surviving
sudden cardiac arrest.
This event has been made possible with the help of the following
sponsors: American Heart Association, Cardiovascular Institute
of the South, HTV 10, Sunburst Media—Louisiana, Terrebonne
General Medical Center, Thibodaux Regional Medical Center,
Charter Media, Lovecomm, Terrebonne Parish Consolidated Government,
Acadian Ambulance, Abbott Laboratories, All Print Unlimited,
All-Right Installations, Atchafalaya OB/Gyn, Bayou Catholic,
Bayou Sign, Candy Fleet, City of Morgan City, Coastal Broadcasting
of Larose (KLRZ), The Courier, Cristiano Ristorante, CV Therapeutics,
Daily Comet, Daily Review, Elwood Stevens, Attorney-at-Law,
Guidant, Hibernia Investment, Houma.com, Houma Reprographics
& Map, KWBJ-TV Allen’s Cable, Major Equipment &
Remediation, The Medicine Shop, Outback Steakhouse, Outside
& In, Pinnacle Computer Services, St. Mary Parish Medical
Society, Swiftships Shipbuilder, LLC, Teche Regional Medical
Center, Taco Bell-Atchafalaya Health Club, Terrebonne Homecare
and Tri-Parish Times.
American
Society of Nuclear Cardiology Recognizes Local Physician
February 2006
Dr.
William Ladd, cardiologist and secretary/treasurer of Cardiovascular
Institute of the South (CIS), was recently named as a Fellow
in the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology (ASNC), an international
society that is the preeminent voice and resource of nuclear
cardiology and cardiovascular computed tomography.
Dr. Ladd has spent much of his career working to maintain
the high standard of care in nuclear cardiology and was certified
by the Certification Council of Nuclear Cardiology (CCNC)
in 1996. Dr. Lad chairs CIS’s continuing medical education
(CME) committee and dedicates much time working to provide
learning opportunities for medical professionals.
As CIS director of nuclear cardiology, Dr. Ladd oversees a
department consisting of eight nuclear cardiology labs that
is the only non-hospital group in Louisiana to have achieved
accreditation by the Intersocietal Committee for the Accreditation
of Nuclear Medicine Laboratories (ICANL). This accomplishment
required a voluntary, in-depth review of CIS nuclear laboratories
and represents a commitment to quality services.
Dr. Ladd is a founding member of the ASNC and also of the
Nuclear Cardiology Foundation, a group concerned with advancing
the field of nuclear cardiology through increasing awareness,
encouraging research and incorporating related emerging technologies.
“I am proud to have been named a Fellow of the ASNC,”
said Dr. Ladd. “In the rapidly changing field of nuclear
cardiology, having a professional group to set medical standards
that ensure quality patient care is of utmost importance.”
The ASNC is governed by a member-elected board of directors
whose main concern is to be a strong, effective and credible
advocate for the profession. The group has more than 4,700
members in good standing, several hundred who reside outside
of the United States. For more information about the ASNC,
visit their Web site at www.asnc.org.
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