Defibrillators coming to all OCDSB schools
Only 41 of public board's 119 elementary schools had the potentially life-saving devices
Senior staff with the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board decided Tuesday to have defibrillators installed by September 2018 in all of the board's schools, a week after a CBC story revealed 78 of the board's 119 elementary schools did not have the potentially life-saving devices.
Last week CBC News told the story of Griffin Martin, an eight-year old boy who died on Feb. 24 after he went into cardiac arrest during recess at Orleans Wood Elementary School.
Not mandatory in Ontario
It's not mandatory for boards in Ontario to equip their schools with defibrillators, though Ottawa's English Catholic board has equipped every one of its schools with AEDs.
The OCDSB already had the devices in all of its high schools and in elementary schools with gymnasiums commonly used after hours by adult sports clubs.
OCDSB director of education Jennifer Adams said the board had always planned to put AEDs in all schools and was rolling their delivery out in phases.
"But certainly when a tragedy happens like that we take those kinds of things very seriously at the school district and it certainly promotes conversation," Adams said.
She said the board has been in discussions with the Martin family since Griffin's death.
Maintenance, training were roadblocks
Mike Carson, the board's chief financial officer and superintendent of facilities, said earlier this month the barrier isn't money, but maintenance and training.
However Carson also acknowledged the technology has improved, and new resources make it "more practical for us to move ahead now."
Damien Martin, Griffin's father, was surprised those were ever sticking points. But he called the board's decision on Tuesday "very good news."
"It is obviously very bittersweet that it took a tragedy like this to start the conversation, but I'm happy to see the progress."
Teaming up with paramedics
The school board will be partnering with the Ottawa Paramedic Service, which oversees some 1,200 defibrillators in public places across Ottawa, including rinks and recreation centres.
Derek Marriner, the coordinator with the paramedic service's public access defibrillator program, said it will still be the school board's responsibility to check the defibrillators monthly.
But if there are problems they can call paramedics and have them replace the machine until the original is fixed.
"I think it's great," said Marriner. "These units work. They provide an individual with a chance of survival."