Skip to content
General News, Medical Health Aged Care

Know what to do in a heart emergency

National First Aid Courses 2 mins read
Key Facts:
  • Cardiovascular disease causes 1 in 4 deaths in Australia, with 57,000 heart attacks annually and 19 deaths per day
  • Over 32,000 Australians experience sudden cardiac arrest yearly, with only 10% surviving without immediate intervention
  • Survival rates can increase to 60-70% when bystanders perform immediate CPR and use an AED quickly
  • Key first aid steps include calling Triple Zero (000), keeping the person calm and upright, loosening clothing, and assisting with prescribed medication
  • Bystander CPR and early AED use are crucial life-saving interventions that anyone can learn through proper training

With February bringing a renewed focus on heart health, a leading first aid training organisation is reminding Australians that in the event of a heart attack, immediate, informed action can save lives. 

National First Aid Courses (NFAC) director Samuel Bohr explained cardiovascular disease remains one of Australia’s biggest health challenges, accounting for around one in four deaths nationally and contributing to thousands of serious heart events every year.

Each year, an estimated 57,000 Australians suffer a heart attack, with someone hospitalised approximately every nine minutes due to a heart attack. On average about 19 Australians die of a heart attack each day.

Equally critical are sudden cardiac arrests where the heart stops beating entirely, with more than 32,000 Australians affected each year and only about one in 10 surviving out of hospital without immediate intervention. 

However, when bystanders start CPR immediately and use an Automated External Defibrillator (AED) within minutes, survival chances can jump dramatically, in some cases to as high as 60–70 per cent.

“Heart Health Month is an important reminder that first aid skills go beyond certificates. They’re practical abilities that can literally save the people we care about most,” Mr Bohr said. 

“Knowing when and how to act in those first minutes makes all the difference.”

Immediate first aid tips for a heart attack

If someone shows symptoms such as chest pain or pressure, shortness of breath, nausea, sweating, or discomfort spreading to the arms, neck, or jaw:

  1. Call Triple Zero (000) immediately - fast professional help is critical.

  2. Help the person sit down and stay calm - ideally sitting upright to ease breathing.

  3. Loosen tight clothing - aiding circulation and comfort.

  4. Assist with prescribed medication - such as nitroglycerin if available and advised.

  5. Be ready to perform CPR - if the person becomes unresponsive and isn’t breathing normally, start chest compressions without delay and continue until paramedics arrive.

Why it matters

Research shows that bystander CPR can significantly increase survival rates in cardiac emergencies, and that early use of an AED,  especially within the first few minutes, can be the difference between life and death.

“Simple, timely actions like calling for help, beginning CPR, and using an AED can turn a potential tragedy into a survival story,” Mr Bohr said.

“These are skills anyone can learn.” 

National First Aid Courses offers accredited first aid training across Australia, covering heart attack response, CPR, AED use, and other life-saving techniques.

To learn more or enrol in a course, head to www.nfac.edu.au

ENDS

 


About us:

About National First Aid Courses (NFAC)

National First Aid Courses is a leading Australian provider of nationally recognised first aid training, delivering practical, up-to-date education for individuals, workplaces, schools and community groups. Courses are delivered by experienced trainers and aligned with current Australian Resuscitation Council (ARC) and ASCIA guidelines.


Contact details:

Samuel Bohr
Director National First Aid  Courses
Email: [email protected]
Ph: 1300 677 191
Website: https://nfac.edu.au/

Media

More from this category

  • Education Training, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 16/02/2026
  • 08:51
Australian College of Nursing

2026 Bullwinkel Scholarships awarded as ACN marks the Bangka Island Massacre anniversary

The Australian College of Nursing Foundation today announced the 22 recipients of the 2026 Bullwinkel Scholars Program, honouring the enduring legacy of the nurses lost in the Bangka Island Massacre on 16 February 1942, and the sole survivor, Lieutenant Colonel Vivian Bullwinkel AO MBE ARRC ED FNM FRCNA. The Bullwinkel Scholars Program is a prestigious scholarship initiative that provides recipients with access to leadership training and development opportunities that mirror the resilience, courage, and dedication embodied by the original nurses of the 8th Australian General Hospital. On 16 February 1942, 21 nurses from the 8th Australian General Hospital were executed…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 16/02/2026
  • 08:00
Monash University

Helping mothers with epilepsy take life-saving medication without fear of birth defects

Scientists have made a breakthrough toward a genetic test that could help thousands of mothers with epilepsy safely take life-saving medication without fear of it causing birth defects in their children. Valproic acid (VPA) is an anti-seizure medication, and for many people with epilepsy it is the only or most effective treatment. But several countries are increasingly restricting its use because around 10 per cent of babies born to mothers who take VPA during pregnancy have a structural birth defect, the nature of which can range from severe neural tube defects to milder defects such as cleft palate. The research,…

  • Community, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 16/02/2026
  • 06:00
Hearts4heart

Charity launches national movement to spotlight Australia’s dangerously ‘SLOW’ response to heart valve disease

MEDIA RELEASE Monday, 16 February 2026: Australia’s response to heart valve disease is moving dangerously slowly, putting hundreds of thousands of lives at risk. To help change that, leading heart charity, Hearts4heart is launching the nation’s first ‘SLOW Symptoms’ campaign during Heart Valve Disease Awareness Week (16–22 February 2026). In 2021, an estimated 600,000 Australians were living with diagnosed heart valve disease, with a further 254,000 people unaware they had the condition, meaning an estimated 850,000 Australians may already be affected.1,2 Australian and global heart health advocates now warn heart valve disease is “the next cardiac epidemic”, driven by an…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.