(Press-News.org) NEW JERSEY, March 27, 2025 — The American Heart Association and The Giants Foundation, the nonprofit organization of the New York Giants, gathered representatives from 12 local schools for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and automated external defibrillator (AED) training on March 20 at MetLife Stadium. According to American Heart Association data, nearly 9 out of 10 people who experience cardiac arrest outside of a hospital die, in part because they do not receive immediate CPR more than half of the time. CPR, especially if performed immediately, can double or triple a person’s chance of survival.
“Early recognition and action in a cardiac emergency are the difference between life and death. When seconds matter it is important to have people nearby who are confident and capable of beginning administering CPR. This event with The Giants Foundation is helping to support that critical link in the community,” said Nancy Brown, chief executive officer of the American Heart Association. “We know that with every CPR training we perform we are one step closer to ensuring that everyone, everywhere is prepared and empowered to perform CPR and become a vital link in the chain of survival.”
The American Heart Association is the worldwide leader in resuscitation science, education and training, and publishes the official scientific guidelines for CPR. With nearly 3 out of 4 cardiac arrests outside of the hospital occurring in homes, knowing how to perform CPR is critically important. With more people ready to perform CPR, the chance for a positive recovery increase for the community.
Compression-only CPR, known as Hands-Only CPR, can be equally effective as traditional CPR in the first few minutes of emergency response and is a skill everyone can learn. It is as simple as calling 911 if you see a teen or adult suddenly collapse and then push hard and fast in the center of the chest.
The schools receiving CPR in Schools kits are:
Hackensack School District, Hackensack, N.J.
Springfield School District, Springfield, N.J.
New Milford School District, New Milford, N.J
Oradell School District, Oradell, N.J.
Clifton School District, Clifton, N.J.
Montclair School District, Montclair, N.J.
Bergen County Special Services, Paramus, N.J.
East Orange School District, East Orange, N.J.
Morristown School District, Morristown, N.J.
Saddle Brook School District, Saddle Brook, N.J.
In addition to the training, The Giants Foundation is donating resources for schools to bring these lifesaving skills back to their campuses and continue to build confidence and capabilities to respond in a cardiac emergency. Each of the 12 schools received a CPR in Schools kit and three of the schools attending received an AED. The CPR in Schools kits include 10 Hands-Only CPR manikins and 10 AED training tools and curriculum to train additional students, faculty, staff and parents. The attending representatives learned the correct rate and depth of compressions and how to use their new resources.
“Having a game plan to improve CPR outcomes in a cardiac emergency is critical when you’re up against the clock,” said Allison Stangeby, vice president of community and corporate relations for the New York Giants. “The Giants Foundation was proud to be able to apply for grant funding through the NFL Foundation to provide CPR in Schools kits and AEDs throughout our area. We were thrilled to welcome our community members to be part of this important training and receive the necessary resources to be able to confidently jump into action.”
In 2023, the NFL launched the Smart Heart Sports Coalition in collaboration with founding members including the NBA, MLB, MLS, NHL, NCAA, the American Heart Association and others. The coalition aims to advocate for all 50 states to adopt evidence-based policies to help prevent fatal outcomes from cardiac arrest among high school students. The American Heart Association reports that as many as 23,000 people under the age of 18 experience cardiac arrest outside of a hospital every year, with nearly 40% being sports related. It is a leading cause of death for student-athletes. Implementing these simple, cost-effective strategies across all 50 states can save lives.
Additional Resources:
Spanish news release (to be added when available)
Bystander CPR | Bystander CPR Infographic (PDF)
Hands-Only CPR Resources
Hands-Only CPR vs CPR with Breaths
Cardiac Arrest vs. Heart Attack
Reducing Disparities for Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest – Community Toolkit: English and Spanish versions available
Take 90 seconds to learn how to save a life at www.heart.org/HandsOnlyCPR.
###
About the American Heart Association
The American Heart Association is a relentless force for a world of longer, healthier lives. The organization has been a leading source of health information for more than one hundred years. Supported by more than 35 million volunteers globally, we fund groundbreaking research, advocate for the public’s health, and provide critical resources to save and improve lives affected by cardiovascular disease and stroke. By driving breakthroughs and implementing proven solutions in science, policy, and care, we work tirelessly to advance health and transform lives every day. Connect with us on heart.org, Facebook, X or by calling 1-800-AHA-USA1.
About The Giants Foundation, Inc. (“TGF”)
TGF is a New Jersey nonprofit corporation recognized by the IRS as tax-exempt under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code (EIN# 22-3183916).
END
The Giants Foundation provide 12 schools with CPR resources to improve cardiac emergency outcomes
The American Heart Association and The Giants Foundation provided training and CPR kits to support the chain of survival
2025-03-28
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Why scientists are worried about weasels
2025-03-28
When monitoring the health of mammal populations, scientists often use camera traps to observe the animals in their habitats. But weasels are so sneaky they’re rarely caught on camera – leaving scientists with questions about this population of predators.
“We’re a little worried about the weasels,” says Roland Kays, a research professor at North Carolina State University and scientist at the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences. “We don’t see them very often, but it’s ...
American College of Cardiology recognizes 21 Distinguished Award recipients
2025-03-28
The American College of Cardiology is proud to announce the recipients of the 2025 Distinguished Awards. The twenty-one recipients have made remarkable contributions to the cardiovascular professional, helping the ACC in its mission to transform cardiovascular care and improve heart health for all.
Awardees will be recognized during Convocation at the American College of Cardiology’s Annual Scientific Session (ACC.25) taking place March 29 – 31, 2025, in Chicago.
The 2025 Distinguished Award winners are:
2025 Bernadine Healy Leadership in Women’s Cardiovascular Disease
Malissa J. Wood, MD, FACC
2025 Distinguished Cardiovascular ...
American College of Cardiology recognizes three recipients of the Hani Najm Global Scholar Award Observership Program
2025-03-28
The American College of Cardiology will honor three early career cardiologists with the Hani Najm Global Scholar Award Observership Program at ACC's Annual Scientific Session (ACC.25), taking place March 29 – 31, 2025, in Chicago.
Established in 2020 at the Saudi Heart Association’s Annual Conference, the Hani Najm Global Award Observership Program encourages and fosters the sharing of knowledge between international cardiology professionals, specifically early career cardiologists in the Middle East and Africa. Through its Observership Program, recipients have the opportunity to ...
DNA helps electronics to leave flatland
2025-03-28
Researchers at Columbia Engineering have for the first time used DNA to help create 3D electronically operational devices with nanometer-size features.
"Going from 2D to 3D can dramatically increase the density and computing power of electronics," said corresponding author Oleg Gang, professor of chemical engineering and of applied physics and materials science at Columbia Engineering and leader of the Center for Functional Nanomaterials' Soft and Bio Nanomaterials Group at Brookhaven National Laboratory.
The new manufacturing technique could also contribute to the ongoing effort ...
Studying cardiac cells in space to repair heart damage on Earth
2025-03-28
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER (FL), March 28, 2025 – Heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States, accounting for one in five deaths. The inability of damaged heart muscle tissue to regenerate makes heart disease difficult to treat, and end-stage heart failure patients have no choice but to join a long list of people waiting for a heart transplant. Researchers from Emory University are working to provide another option for such patients. To do this, the team took their research to a laboratory unlike any on Earth—the International Space Station (ISSInternational Space Station).
Chunhui ...
Studies evaluate the health effects of bioactive compounds obtained from plants
2025-03-28
Fruits and plant extracts contain bioactive compounds that can help treat or prevent diseases. To characterize and understand their mechanism of action, researchers from universities and research institutions in Brazil and Germany have conducted independent but complementary studies.
Some of the results were presented at a lecture session on the future of food and nutrition research on March 25th during FAPESP Week Germany at the Free University of Berlin.
According to Ulrich Dobrindt, a professor at the University of Munich in Germany, medicinal plants contain different types of phytochemicals (natural ...
Howard University physicist revisits the computational limits of life and Schrödinger’s essential question in the era of quantum computing
2025-03-28
WASHINGTON, DC – (March 28, 2025) More than 80 years ago, Erwin Schrödinger, a theoretical physicist steeped in the philosophy of Schopenhauer and the Upanishads, delivered a series of public lectures at Trinity College, Dublin, which eventually came to be published in 1944 under the title What is Life?
Now, in the 2025 International Year of Quantum Science and Technology, Philip Kurian, a theoretical physicist and founding director of the Quantum Biology Laboratory (QBL) at Howard University in Washington, D.C., has used the laws of quantum mechanics, which Schrödinger postulated, and the QBL’s discovery of cytoskeletal ...
Navigating a US bioscience career despite anticipated cuts in funding for biomedicine
2025-03-28
Many young and midcareer scientists in the U.S. are understandably anxious about potential cuts to government funding and the rise of junk science. Although your future in biomedicine may not be what you originally planned, it might actually become more interesting and filled with new possibilities and opportunities for innovation. Don’t think of this time to hunker down and disappear. Do the opposite with the understanding that you are more powerful and brilliant than you may realize.
In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to ...
How the failure of two dams amplified the Derna Flood tragedy
2025-03-28
A new study reveals that the devastating 2023 flood in Derna, Libya, was not merely the result of extreme rainfall but was drastically intensified by a major design shortcoming and its resulting collapse of two embankment dams. Through advanced hydrological modeling and satellite data analysis, researchers found that while Storm Daniel brought heavy rainfall, the catastrophe stemmed from dam failures and flawed risk assessment and communication—amplifying the destruction nearly twentyfold. The findings highlight the urgent need for improved flood mitigation strategies, especially in dryland regions where high uncertainty ...
Oral contraceptives and smoking impact steroid hormone levels in healthy adults
2025-03-28
Steroid hormone levels in healthy adults are influenced by oral contraceptives and smoking, as well as other lifestyle choices and factors such as biological sex and age, according to new research that has just been published in leading international journal Science Advances.
The objective of the research was to expand knowledge and understanding of steroid hormone levels, including corticoids and sex hormones, in healthy women and men over a broad age range. This is the first study to analyse such a large number of hormones in nearly 1,000 healthy people, filling a ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
WSU researchers develop machine learning model to predict virus reservoirs
Do authoritarian narratives shape Japanese public opinion?
New plesiosaur discovery sheds light on early Jurassic evolution and plausible endemism
Chance discovery improves stability of bioelectronic material used in medical implants, computing and biosensors
Using artificial intelligence to calculate the heart’s biological age through ECG data predicts increased risk of mortality and cardiovascular events
“She loves me, she loves me not”: physical forces encouraged evolution of multicellular life, scientists propose
The hidden superconducting state in NbSe₂: shedding layers, gaining insights
New AI models possible game-changers within protein science and healthcare
Highly accurate blood test diagnoses Alzheimer’s disease, measures extent of dementia
Mind the seismic gap: Understanding earthquake types in Guerrero, Mexico
One hour’s screen use after going to bed increases your risk of insomnia by 59%, scientists find
Canada needs to support health research at home and abroad
Cannabis use disorder among insured pregnant women in the US between 2015-2020
Education system needs overhaul to support school anxiety, psychologists say
Play “humanizes” pediatric care and should be key feature of a child-friendly NHS – report
Stricter oversight needed as financial misconduct drives risk-taking in banking
Cardiac arrest during long-distance running races
Preventable cardiac deaths during marathons are down, Emory study finds
New study finds peripheral artery disease often underdiagnosed and undertreated; opportunity to improve treatments, lower death rates
Use of antidepressant medication linked to substantial increase in risk of sudden cardiac death
Atrial fibrillation diagnosed in midlife is linked to a 21% increased risk of dementia at any age and a 36% higher risk of early-onset dementia
Mode of death in patients with heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction
Intravenous ferric carboxymaltose in heart failure with iron deficiency
Artificial intelligence in the prevention of sudden death
Oral semaglutide vastly reduces heart attacks, strokes in people with type 2 diabetes
Prothrombin complex concentrate vs frozen plasma for coagulopathic bleeding in cardiac surgery
Who needs a statin? New study compares prescribing recommendations based on traditional risk factors vs. coronary artery calcium scoring
Finerenone and atrial fibrillation in heart failure
Low coronary artery calcium score is associated with an excellent prognosis regardless of a person’s age, new study finds
Groundbreaking consensus statement on conduction system pacing released: a major milestone in the evolution of pacing therapy
[Press-News.org] The Giants Foundation provide 12 schools with CPR resources to improve cardiac emergency outcomesThe American Heart Association and The Giants Foundation provided training and CPR kits to support the chain of survival