House approves Corvese bill to require AEDs at all
health care facilities

 

STATE HOUSE – The House of Representatives today approved legislation sponsored by Rep. Arthur Corvese to require all health care facilities to have a functioning automated external defibrillator and a person trained in its use.

Automated external defibrillators (AED) analyze a person’s heartbeat and, if necessary, deliver an electrical shock to the heart to re-establish an effective rhythm. Since 2017, Rhode Island law has required public places with a capacity of 300 or more people to keep one on site, and to have at least one person trained to use it.

Representative Corvese’s legislation (2024-H 7044A) would ensure that health care facilities, regardless of capacity, are subject to the same requirement. The requirement would include hospitals, nursing facilities, ambulatory surgery centers, treatment centers, school and neighborhood health centers and the like, as well as physicians’, dentists’ and other health care providers’ offices.

Representative Corvese (D-Dist. 55, North Providence) said he introduced the bill after a friend experienced a near-fatal reaction to a lydocaine injection at a health care facility.  While fortunately, his friend did survive, the person went into cardiac arrest while being transported by ambulance to a hospital. That situation likely would have been fatal had the ambulance not arrived sooner, since the facility where he received the treatment was not equipped with an AED.

“AEDs absolutely save lives. Cardiac arrest can happen anywhere, but health care facilities in particular should be equipped for that situation. The more AEDs that are available in places where people are, the more likely it is that people will survive cardiac arrest,” said Representative Corvese.

The bill now goes to the Senate.

 

 

 

The government shutdown is now three weeks old and that means it is tied for the second-longest in U.S. history. Another vote in the Senate failed to end the shutdown yesterday. No votes are scheduled for today but Senate Republicans will be having lunch at the White House where President Trump is expected to thank them for keeping a unified front.        President Trump is getting the go-ahead to deploy National Guard troops in Portland, Oregon. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday that presidential determinations are not reviewable by federal courts. Meanwhile in the nation's capital, DC's attorney general says the National Guard could be deployed there until at least next summer and President Trump is suggesting he might invoke the Insurrection Act to justify sending troops to San Francisco.        Vice President JD Vance is in Israel for a two-day visit. Vance's visit comes after Hamas on Monday night returned the body of another dead hostage to Israel. The remains of 15 more are still believed to be held by the Palestinian militant group inside Gaza.        Virginia Roberts Giuffre's [[ joo-FRAYs ]] posthumous memoir is out today. "Nobody's Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice," details how she was groomed as a teenager as a victim of late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and other men. Giuffre completed the book before her death by suicide in April of this year. She was 41 years old.        General Motors beat earnings expectations in the third quarter. The automaker raised its financial guidance today after revenue was down less than one percent from the same time last year at more than 48 and a half billion dollars. The company also lowered its predictions for the expected impact of tariffs.        The NBA regular season tips off with a doubleheader today. Houston faces the defending champion Thunder in Oklahoma City. The nightcap features a Golden State showdown between Luka Doncic [[ DON-chitch ]] and the Lakers against Steph Curry's Warriors from Los Angeles.