Heart Devices for Anaheim High Schools
- Share via
Anaheim Union High School trustees voted 3 to 1 Thursday to buy each of the district’s 10 campuses a heart defibrillator, a device to treat sudden cardiac arrest or arrhythmia.
School board President Katherine H. Smith, who made the proposal, said the district would be the first in the nation with such a program, which would cost about $30,000 and involve training employees to use the machines.
Trustees Thomas Holguin and Harald G. Martin enthusiastically backed the plan, noting that a woman in Anaheim was saved by one of the devices earlier this week.
Voting “no” was Trustee Alexandria Coronado, who said, “In our 102-year history, we can’t find anybody who has ever needed one of these. I would never want anyone to pass away on one of our campuses, but I can’t justify the expense. That’s half a teacher’s salary.”
Holguin responded: “But you could save a whole teacher’s life.”
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.