Automated External Defibrillators

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Welcome to Automated External Defibrillator

We have a range of AED or Automated External defibrillators for you to choose from below. Select from full rescue external defibrillators, heartstart defibrillators, biphasic defibrillators, zoll defibrillators, portable defibrillators and home defibrillator. Ring us if you do not see the model you are after.

 

The Problem
Many people die unnecessarily every day from both sudden cardiac death and trauma. Sudden cardiac arrest, with survival at a dismal 3-7%, is the leading
global killer. 1

More than 30,000 sudden cardiac arrests occur in Australia, resulting in more than 28,000 deaths each year and more than 1 million deaths worldwide.1

 

Defibrillators that do more than Defibrillate
ZOLL defibrillators are designed with the user in mind. ZOLL has developed full rescue AED’s to support both CPR and defibrillation.

In over 50% of Sudden Cardiac Arrests where no shock is advised, good CPR is the essential life saving intervention.2 So for the infrequent rescuer, ZOLL real CPR help ensures that the best manual CPR is delivered as quickly as possible.

 

Zoll AED Plus Defibrillator

 

The ZOLL AED Plus® is a Full-Rescue AED that supports both defibrillation and CPR (Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation). For less-experienced rescuers, the AED Plus supports the complete chain of survival. The graphical user interface – which combines pictures, text displays and voice prompts – helps the rescuer perform each important life-saving action by guiding them through each step.

 

 

 

Zoll AED PRO Defibrillator

 

The ZOLL AED Plus® is a Full-Rescue AED that supports both defibrillation and CPR (Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation). For less-experienced rescuers, the AED Plus supports the complete chain of survival. The graphical user interface – which combines pictures, text displays and voice prompts – helps the rescuer perform each important life-saving action by guiding them through each step.

 

 

 

Types of Defibrillators

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. (HeartStart Australia – reducing risk from Australia’s biggest killer. www.stjohn.org.au/t_hscs.html. Accessed November 2007. NOW REMOVED). REPLACED WITH: ARC guideline 10.1.3 states ‘Survival from out of hospital SCA in Australia remains poor with approximately less than 10% of victims leaving hospital alive ACCESS MEDICAL http://www.itd2.com/newsletter/Oct03/aed.html.