Last Updated on 24/04/2024 by Sarah Sarsby
Experts from the BHTA First Aid Medical Equipment (FAME) and Defibrillator Section have worked together to agree on a suggested standard for cabinets that house public access Automated External Defibrillators (AEDs).
The guidance was put together because people were being supplied cabinets that weren’t suitable for the application. For instance, they didn’t have heaters in.
The BHTA FAME and Defibrillator Section came together along with leading manufacturers in the field to agree a proposed standard for the benefit of the user’s community to ensure that when they access a defibrillator in a cardiac arrest medical emergency that the defibrillator will have been kept in a suitable environment for its effective deployment, provided the serviceable items, such as pads, have been kept in date.
All public access defibrillators should be registered on the British Heart Foundation (BHF) Circuit and similar other charity websites, such as Webnos. When someone dials 999 in a cardiac arrest medical emergency, this means that ambulance services know where the nearest operational defibrillator is to guide the caller to its location and, if necessary, give the access code.
Download the BHTA guidance document as a PDF here.