South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS
 Foundation Trust (SECAmb) is supporting a national campaign,
 ‘Shoctober’, throughout October to hunt down life-saving
 defibrillators.
SECAmb
 is asking people to #FindTheDefib
 and tweet their selfies next to them to @SECAmbulance and
 @SECAmbulanceCFR to
 locate life-saving machines that have been bought with good
 intentions but aren’t registered with the Trust.
It is essential for ambulance services
 to be aware of the locations of all public defibrillators (AEDs) in
 their area in order for Emergency Medical Advisors to direct 999
 callers to them in the event of a nearby cardiac arrest.
A cardiac arrest occurs when person’s heart
 stops pumping blood around their body and to their brain. The
 earlier someone receives treatment in the form of CPR and a shock
 from a defibrillator the greater their chance of survival.
SECAmb Community Partnership Lead,
 Malcolm Legg said: “We really want people to get behind this
 campaign. It’s vital that every single public access defibrillator
 is registered on our system so that we can direct 999 callers to
 them to be used in the event of a cardiac arrest.
“It’s a fun way to raise awareness of
 an important issue. Whenever you see a defibrillator grab your
 phone and take a selfie, even if you think it’s one we already know
 about. Send us as much information you can about the location and
 we can check it against our database.”
AEDs are easy to use, easy to carry and won’t
 deliver a shock unless it is required. There is no clinical
 training required to be able to use the machine.
The location of AEDs can sometimes be marked
 with a sign showing a white heart on a green background, or they
 could just be mounted on a wall behind bars, in corridors, gyms,
 leisure centres, offices, tourist attractions, schools, colleges,
 restaurants, coffee shops – anywhere at all!
If you don’t tweet you can also send a photo
 to pad@secamb.nhs.uk. And if
 you don’t want to send a photo just email the location details and
 we’ll make sure the device is logged and ready to use in the event
 of an emergency.