BC-AED-STBK
MED-TAC International
MIR-AED-STBK
MED-TAC International
MED-TAC International's AEDs & Resuscitation Devices collection covers the complete cardiac arrest response toolkit: automated external defibrillators (AEDs), bag-valve masks (BVMs), pocket masks, and CPR adjuncts. Configured for public access deployment, law enforcement, EMS, and occupational health programs — aligned with American Heart Association (AHA) and American College of Surgeons (ACS) resuscitation guidelines.
What AED Should I Choose for Public Access, Office, or Tactical Deployment?
AED selection depends on the deployment environment, intended user, and maintenance burden. For public access (schools, offices, gyms): devices with step-by-step voice and visual guidance, minimal maintenance, and long battery/pad life (e.g., Philips HeartStart FRx, ZOLL AED 3, Physio-Control CR2). For law enforcement and tactical: compact, ruggedized AEDs with IP-rated enclosures and compatibility with medical-grade accessories. For EMS and clinical: full-featured monitor/defibrillators (e.g., ZOLL X Series, Physio-Control LIFEPAK) that integrate with advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) workflows. AHA guidelines recommend AED placement within 90–120 seconds of any location in a facility — the time to first shock is the primary determinant of survival from shockable cardiac arrest. The Respiratory Support collection provides complementary airway management supplies.
AED and Resuscitation Device Comparison
| Device Category | Function | Key Products | User Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Public Access AED | Guided defibrillation for bystanders | Philips FRx, ZOLL AED 3, Physio CR2 | Untrained bystander to EMT |
| Bag-Valve Mask (BVM) | Positive-pressure ventilation (without intubation) | Laerdal Silicone BVM, Ambu SPUR II | First responder, EMS, hospital |
| Pocket Mask | Barrier device for mouth-to-mask ventilation | Laerdal Pocket Mask, CPR Microshield | Trained layperson, first responder |
| CPR Feedback Device | Real-time compression depth/rate guidance | ZOLL CPR-D Padz with CPR feedback, Laerdal CPRmeter | EMS, hospital |
| AED Accessories & Pads | Replacement pads, batteries, cabinets | Brand-specific (Philips, ZOLL, Physio-Control) | All users |
What Do AHA 2020 Guidelines Say About AED Use and CPR Technique?
The American Heart Association 2020 Guidelines for CPR and Emergency Cardiovascular Care emphasize: (1) early recognition and activation — call 911 and deploy the AED simultaneously; (2) high-quality CPR — compressions at 2–2.4 inches depth, 100–120/minute rate, full chest recoil, and minimal interruptions; (3) early defibrillation — the AED should be applied and analyzed as soon as available; each minute without defibrillation reduces survival by approximately 7–10%; (4) integrated post-resuscitation care — minimize interruptions during rhythm analysis and shock delivery. For untrained bystanders, AHA supports Hands-Only CPR (compressions only, no breaths) as an acceptable alternative to conventional CPR for witnessed adult cardiac arrest. AED pads should be placed at the right upper chest (below the clavicle) and the left lateral thorax (below the axilla).
Does Law Enforcement Need AEDs?
Yes. The Law Enforcement-AED (LE-AED) program, supported by the American Heart Association, recognizes that law enforcement officers are often first on scene for medical emergencies — arriving before EMS in many settings. Patrol vehicle AED programs have demonstrated 40–50% survival rates for witnessed ventricular fibrillation when officers defibrillate within the first 2–3 minutes. IACP and AHA recommend AED deployment in patrol vehicles, police stations, and courthouses. Law enforcement AED programs complement the active shooter/trauma protocols in the Mass Casualty Incident Active Shooter Kits collection — cardiac arrest secondary to trauma or metabolic derangement is a significant component of law enforcement medical responses.
What Are AED Maintenance and Inspection Requirements?
AED readiness requires routine maintenance: (1) monthly visual inspection of the device status indicator (most modern AEDs have a self-check LED — green/checkmark = ready); (2) annual or manufacturer-specified battery and pad replacement (most pads have 2-year expiration, batteries vary by model and use); (3) documentation of inspection dates per OSHA and NFPA 99 recommendations for AED programs; (4) post-use restocking — pads and data card replacement after any clinical or training use. AHA recommends designating an AED program coordinator responsible for maintenance and records. MED-TAC stocks replacement pads, batteries, and accessories for major AED brands.
Equip Your Team for Cardiac Emergency Response
AEDs, BVMs, and CPR equipment — AHA/ACS guideline-compliant resuscitation gear for public access to advanced care settings.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can an untrained bystander safely use an AED?+
What is the difference between an AED and a monitor/defibrillator?+
How many AEDs should a building have per AHA guidelines?+
Can AED pads be used on children?+
What is the role of a BVM vs. a pocket mask in resuscitation?+
Related Collections
All products sourced from the actual brand manufacturer or authorized master distributors. CoTCCC recommendation status verified where applicable. Ships from MED-TAC International, Pembroke Pines, FL — clinician-founded, veteran-led, SDVOSB-certified.