Automated
External Defibrillator
By Laerdal
ER TRAINING NATIONWIDE
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At the
turn of this century, the body of a young girl was pulled from the River Seine
in Paris. There was no evidence of violence and it was assumed she had taken her
own life.
Because
her identity could not be established, a death mask was made, as was customary
in such cases. The young girl’s delicate beauty and ethereal smile added to
the enigma of her death. Romantic stories that speculated on this mystery were
published. According to one, her death was the result of an unrequited romance.
This story became popular throughout Europe, as did reproductions of her death
mask.
Generations
later, the Girl from the River Seine would be rediscovered when Asmund S.
Laerdal began the development of a realistic and effective training aid to teach
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. He believed that if such a manikin was life-sized
and extremely realistic in appearance, students would be better motivated to
learn this lifesaving procedure. Moved by the story of the girl so tragically
taken by early death, he fashioned her mask for the face of his new
resuscitation training manikin, Resusci Anne.
Resusci
Anne celebrated her thirty-fifth birthday in 1995. Inspired by The Girl from the
River Seine, Resusci Anne has become a symbol of life to the millions of people
throughout the world who have learned the life giving technique of modern
resuscitation, and to those whose lives she has helped save from unnecessary
death.

Emergency Response Training Nationwide.
Copyright © 2005 [Emergency Response Training Nationwide]. All rights reserved.
Revised: April 24, 2005
.