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WTF seriously

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    #11
    Originally posted by David71 View Post

    Really!
    That's like saying ice-cream isn't a food group
    Only quoting you what some Honorable members think.
    "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

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      #12
      Originally posted by WTFH View Post

      Yes, we have one at home. The WifeTM is also signed up to https://www.goodsamapp.org/cardiac
      When we lived in the Surrey Hills, we raised the funds to get one for the local village. Where we are now, the village hall already has one.
      that's a great idea. One I looked at a while ago.
      But I couldn;t work out what maintenance requirements are and how long the battery will last.

      No point having one, and then when it is needed 3,4 5 etc. years later and it's dead.
      See You Next Tuesday

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        #13
        Originally posted by WTFH View Post

        Yes, we have one at home. The WifeTM is also signed up to https://www.goodsamapp.org/cardiac
        When we lived in the Surrey Hills, we raised the funds to get one for the local village. Where we are now, the village hall already has one.
        Yeah I have seen them in some villages I have visited which is great. But in the big smoke it is not so easy I suppose - or not so organised.
        Its one of those if something happenned you would think why did I not buy one.........
        This looks really good https://www.goodsamapp.org/cardiac
        also this https://www.thecircuit.uk/

        Looks like about £1,000 - £1,300 to buy.......... - they really are expensive

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          #14
          Originally posted by Lance View Post

          that's a great idea. One I looked at a while ago.
          But I couldn;t work out what maintenance requirements are and how long the battery will last.

          No point having one, and then when it is needed 3,4 5 etc. years later and it's dead.
          Depending on the brand/model, the consumables are the pads and the batteries. You might need to replace the pads every couple of years. The batteries will last up to 5 years.
          Again, depending on lots of things, the pads will be about £50-75 a set, the batteries range from around £120 to £300.

          Our current defib is a Cardiac Science one, we'll probably replace it with a HeartSine
          …Maybe we ain’t that young anymore

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            #15
            Originally posted by WTFH View Post

            Depending on the brand/model, the consumables are the pads and the batteries. You might need to replace the pads every couple of years. The batteries will last up to 5 years.
            Again, depending on lots of things, the pads will be about £50-75 a set, the batteries range from around £120 to £300.

            Our current defib is a Cardiac Science one, we'll probably replace it with a HeartSine
            The though of a pair of used hairy pads...
            "A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims, but accomplices," George Orwell

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by WTFH View Post

              Yes, we have one at home. The WifeTM is also signed up to https://www.goodsamapp.org/cardiac
              When we lived in the Surrey Hills, we raised the funds to get one for the local village. Where we are now, the village hall already has one.
              I never heard of people having them for home use but we have one in each of the villages we sit between, probably about 1min drive.
              My bigger fear (if I choose to think about it) is of falling down in the garden 20m from the house and nobody knowing, but that can happen to anyone. It's a valid justification for an Apple Watch... it will be interesting to see if constant personal health monitoring is actually the thing smart-watches end up being useful for. The number of lives that could be saved/helped by your watch knowing you are sick before you do must be significant, and this is basically Sci-Fi that could be mainstream pretty soon.
              Originally posted by MaryPoppins
              I'd still not breastfeed a nazi
              Originally posted by vetran
              Urine is quite nourishing

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by d000hg View Post

                I never heard of people having them for home use but we have one in each of the villages we sit between, probably about 1min drive.
                My bigger fear (if I choose to think about it) is of falling down in the garden 20m from the house and nobody knowing, but that can happen to anyone. It's a valid justification for an Apple Watch... it will be interesting to see if constant personal health monitoring is actually the thing smart-watches end up being useful for. The number of lives that could be saved/helped by your watch knowing you are sick before you do must be significant, and this is basically Sci-Fi that could be mainstream pretty soon.
                I remember way back in that late 80s wearing a gadget that monitored us when we were working on our own in remote locations. If we stopped moving it would send a signal to alert others. There must be an updated version.
                "A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims, but accomplices," George Orwell

                Comment


                  #18
                  Originally posted by Paddy View Post

                  I remember way back in that late 80s wearing a gadget that monitored us when we were working on our own in remote locations. If we stopped moving it would send a signal to alert others. There must be an updated version.
                  My dad has had an alert pendant since his heart attacks a few years ago. It’s a SuresafeGo. It has a built in SIM card, can detect falls, and has a big button. If he falls, or presses the button, the first thing is he gets a call to the pendant. If he doesn’t answer that, then they call 5 numbers that he has registered and an ambulance.
                  I suspect a watch would be even better with a heart rate monitor built in.
                  …Maybe we ain’t that young anymore

                  Comment


                    #19
                    Originally posted by d000hg View Post

                    I never heard of people having them for home use
                    It’s not just for home use, although The WifeTM has used it on me before, as a demonstration to some friends as to how safe they are. The pads she used were out of date, so they were going in the bin anyway. It’s quite funny watching people’s faces when they think that you are putting yourself at serious risk, when in reality modern defibs are pretty much idiot proof. I suspect almost all the posters on here would be able to use one safely.
                    …Maybe we ain’t that young anymore

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                      #20
                      Doesn't everyone carry a defibrilator in the glove compatment of their Aston Martin?
                      INKSPE etc.

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