OVER 80,000 people take part in our CPR training sessions across Kent, Surrey and Sussex

As part of our biggest ever education and awareness campaign our expert air ambulance doctors and paramedics provided free online and in-person training sessions tailored to every age group from four years old to 80+. Those learning included thousands of school children, families, individuals, businesses, shoppers and holiday makers, equipping them all with the vital skills to help save the life of someone in cardiac arrest.  

Across the South East an average of 24 people a day experience a cardiac arrest. Surprisingly 80% happen to people while they are at home – and so they are likely to be with a family member, friend, or someone they know well, at the time. Currently only 1 in 10 people survive but we want to change that by training an army of lifesavers so that people can be a lifeline for a loved one when they need it the most.   

The online sessions have been viewed by over 60,000 people across the South East, far exceeding last year’s total of 17,000. Thousands of others took part in face-to-face sessions at Gatwick Airport, Shepherd Neame pubs, Cobham Services on the M25, the Orchards Shopping Centre in Haywards Heath and Bluewater Shopping Centre. 

Paramedic and Education Manager, Ben Paul, said: “We have been blown away by the public response to this campaign. When we started planning to livestream the sessions last year, we thought we might reach a few hundred people, so to have got to the point where we can equip more than 80,000 people in one day with skills that could help them save a life is truly amazing.  

“Improving survival rates from cardiac arrest is a key aim for us at KSS but we can’t do it alone. Family, friends, or even neighbours, are critically important in providing CPR in those first crucial moments after suffering a cardiac arrest and we have demonstrated anyone can learn these lifesaving skills.  

“Providing bystander CPR and using a defibrillator in the first few minutes is absolutely key and in combination with our medical teams advanced critical care interventions gives patients the very best chances of survival” 

On Restart a Heart Day itself our crew visited Holcombe Grammar School in Chatham to lead a morning assembly for the sixth form and give face to face CPR and defibrillator training. The visit was covered by BBC, ITV and KMTV, generating coverage which helped make sure this vital campaign reached as many people as possible. 

Our crew members were interviewed, as well as former patient Graham Beswick, who received lifesaving bystander CPR after a cardiac arrest and KSS volunteer Steve Harley who saved his father Colin’s life by giving him CPR when he collapsed with a cardiac arrest. 

Giles Phillips, a teacher at Holcombe Grammar School, and former KSS patient, said: “The assembly certainly set the scene for why the work KSS does is so important and why knowledge of effective CPR is such an important life skill. The practical session on CPR and the use of a defibrillator has certainly got the students talking!” 

The campaign was supported by Brighton & Hove Albion Football Club, with our doctors and paramedics helping to train, men’s and women’s first team players as well as members of the under 21 squad, along with the club’s celebrity Ambassador Norman Cook (AKA Fatboy Slim). 

The club also devoted its social media to Restart a Heart for the day. On Restart a Heart Day there were special livestream sessions for Girlguides. We recently launched inspiring new Girlguiding London and South East England Challenge Badge, the Air Ambulance KSS Mission Badge

To learn more and view a pre-recorded CPR and defibrillator training session with our crew to gain these vital skills that could help you save a life, visit aakss.org.uk/restart 

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We ran in person as well as livestreaming sessions in CPR and using a defibrillator
Our campaign for Restart a Heart Day generated a lot of interest from the local media
During a visit to Holcombe Grammar School in Kent our crew taught CPR to over a hundred sixth formers

Saving lives when every second counts

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