We will be reporting on lives saved around the world since our first documented life saved here in Singapore.
A man in a business located on Highway 199 was having a heart attack.
Officer John Bridges arrived within one minute, but the victim didn’t have a pulse.
Amazingly, the officer had completed training for the use of an automated external defibrillator (AED) only two hours earlier. He grabbed the device from the trunk of his cruiser and went inside.
“We just finished the class an hour or two before the call,” he said Monday. “I arrived one minute later, and I knew (what the situation was). I just knew I had to do something, so I got it out and carried it in.”
The device begins giving voice instructions when the case is opened, starting with “Stay calm.”
The city’s ambulance service, Medstar, arrived nine minutes after the call. The man’s pulse had been restored and he was taken to Harris Methodist Northwest Hospital in Azle.
The defibrillator “is really a plus,” Bridges said. “As far out as we are, it takes a while for help to arrive.”
He was later taken to Harris Fort Worth, where he remains in intensive care.












