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妻友社区 police officer uses quick action, training to save woman鈥檚 life

It seemed like just another workout at the Winder Barrow Brad Akins YMCA for Ashley Still, until she saw an employee from the gym hurrying over to her. A woman had collapsed near the swimming pool, and the employee knew Still was a first responder.
Still, a 妻友社区 (GGC) police officer, rushed from the weight room to the indoor swimming pool area. She knew what was wrong the second she laid eyes on the unconscious woman.
鈥淚 immediately recognized it as full cardiac arrest,鈥 said Still. 鈥淪he had no pulse and was displaying agonal gasps. I went to straight hands-on CPR, working with the team of people that were there.鈥
Fortunately, the YMCA employees who were the first to the woman鈥檚 side had grabbed the club鈥檚 Automated External Defibrillator (AED) machine and had begun hooking it up. Still happens to be the certified AED trainer for GGC.
鈥淭he purpose of an AED is to restore a normal cardiac rhythm,鈥 explained Still. 鈥淣ormally in cardiac arrest the heart is kind of going nuts. The AED shocks the heart to restore the normal rhythm. Having that available really helps people.鈥
Still stepped in and lead the resuscitation effort, using CPR and one shock from the AED to get the woman鈥檚 heart beating again.
鈥淭he training definitely just kicked in. So many times repetitively teaching about it 鈥 it just took over,鈥 said Still, noting that she had taught a BLS (Basic Life Support) class to fellow GGC police officers just days before. 鈥淓verything worked exactly how it鈥檚 supposed to.鈥
It saved the woman鈥檚 life.
Still, of Monroe, has been a GGC police officer for six years. Before that, she was a GGC student, earning a degree in criminal justice in 2012 鈥 but she didn鈥檛 start out to be a police officer.
鈥淲hen I started at GGC we didn鈥檛 have but four majors, and criminal justice wasn鈥檛 one of them. I transitioned into it. I started off as a biology major because I was going to pursue nursing,鈥 she said. However, Still鈥檚 sister was suffering from a long illness which eventually caused her to lose her taste for hospitals. She switched her major to psychology for a semester, then took a semester off. When she came back, the school had introduced a criminal justice major. She decided to give it a try and made straight A鈥檚 from the start.
鈥淚t鈥檚 one of those things. When you find what you鈥檙e supposed to do in life, it just kind of works,鈥 she said.
Still has been a tireless advocate for AED machines, and has used her own life experiences to fuel her efforts to educate her fellow first responders and get more of the portable medical devices placed in every building and in every patrol car on GGC鈥檚 campus. She is intimately acquainted with the devastating effects of heart disease, having lost her own father to a heart attack.
鈥淗eart disease is the number one killer of people in the United States. My dad died from a cardiac-related event, so I get what loss is about,鈥 said Still. 鈥淢y sister passed in 2014 and my dad passed two years later. The knowing of loss is the driving factor for the medical stuff that I like to teach. I love anything preventative, so if I can prevent loss, or hurt, or sadness 鈥 whether it鈥檚 crime or health-related 鈥 that鈥檚 my ultimate goal.鈥
Still鈥檚 training ensures that every GGC officer is as prepared to respond to a cardiac event as she is. She said the event at the YMCA illustrates that emergencies can happen anywhere, not just on campus.
鈥淚 try to tell our officers 鈥 we just never know what鈥檚 going to happen. We assume it鈥檚 going to happen on campus, but when you go to the gas station and a mom runs up to you with an infant that鈥檚 not breathing, they don鈥檛 care what the patch on your arm says. They just see somebody that can help.鈥
As it turns out, Still is not the only GGC officer to save a life with an AED machine. In 2015, Sgt. Tamu Washington used an AED machine to revive a heart attack victim on campus, showing just how important it is to have those machines handy, said Still.
Good training and equipment are essential for saving lives, but as for the woman she was able to save in the YMCA last week, Still thinks a little bit of luck, and maybe some divine intervention might have also had a hand in it.
鈥淔rom what I understand she was there to watch her grandkids at their swim lessons. She wasn鈥檛 supposed to be there 鈥 she changed her mind last minute 鈥 so, it worked out for her too. Everybody being at the right place at the right time,鈥 Still said. 鈥淟ast I heard, she鈥檚 doing fine. I understand she鈥檚 still in the hospital. That鈥檚 a bonus. The fact she鈥檚 here to see her grandkids another day 鈥 that鈥檚 all that matters to me.鈥