Clonmany Community First Responders have been delighted to accept a defibrillator donated by National Broadband Ireland (NBI) and its charity partner The RISE Global Foundation.
The device will “literally save lives, ” says Joe Joyce, a Clonmany Community First Responders volunteer.
As a newly formed group of local volunteers, Clonmany First Responders aim to train ordinary members of the community to respond to medical emergencies in the local area. Providing a vital community service, the first responders are often on scene before ambulance crews, administrating first aid and potentially saving lives.
Joe Joyce said: “As a rural community, our voluntary group provides a vital service which addresses a local need and service. In some situations, ambulances can be asked to travel long distances, taking over an hour to reach the patient in need of urgent care. Recognising the challenges the healthcare providers are facing, our local community has taken the initiative to set up this group and do everything we can to help.
“We are absolutely thrilled to receive funding from NBI and RISE for this new defibrillator.”
The RISE Global Foundation is a private foundation established by NBI founder, David McCourt, and seeks to empower rural communities with better access to technology. In the past three years, RISE has provided over 130 cash grants to charities, social enterprises, small businesses, farms and schools across rural Ireland.
Having attended Clonmany Community First Responders’ base during a recent trip to Donegal, McCourt added: “The volunteers at Clonmany Community First Responders epitomise the community spirit that is the fabric of rural Ireland. As a team of 31 volunteers, these men and women have witnessed a problem in their community and come together to solve it. They have each selflessly given up their time and energy to ensure responders are well trained and well equipped, and it’s our absolute honour at RISE and NBI to support the group by donating this new life-saving equipment.”
Clonmany Community First Responders is a newly established group that started operating in September. Certified by the National Ambulance Service, the group will receive alerts for call outs for cardiac arrest, chest pain, stroke and choking incidents.