The West Virginia medical journal
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Sudden death, particularly when occurring in children and adolescents, is a traumatic event not only for the victim's family, but for the entire community. It has been shown that school-based automated external defibrillator (AED) programs provide a high survival rate for both students and nonstudents who suffer sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) on school grounds. The use of AEDs is becoming increasingly more common in schools in the United States. In West Virginia middle and high schools, we analyzed the prevalence and use of AEDs, barriers to obtaining a device, and cases of sudden death on school grounds. ⋯ Over two thirds of West Virginia middle schools and high schools currently have at least one AED on their premises. An AED is an effective way of preventing death following sudden cardiac arrest, and has saved at least one life in a West Virginia school. While most schools without AEDs cite cost as the main deterrent, the majority of schools with a device received them via donation or grant. We submit that a number of sudden deaths on West Virginia school grounds could possibly have been averted by use of an AED.