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American Heart Association Launches Initiative to Close Communication Gaps in Emergency Cardiac and Stroke Response

By Editorial Staff
The American Heart Association, supported by T-Mobile, is launching an initiative to identify and address technology and communication gaps in emergency response systems for cardiac arrest, heart attack, and stroke across 13 U.S. cities.

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American Heart Association Launches Initiative to Close Communication Gaps in Emergency Cardiac and Stroke Response

The American Heart Association (AHA) announced a new initiative to improve emergency response for cardiac arrest, heart attack, and stroke by addressing critical communication and technology gaps. Supported by T-Mobile, the initiative will convene EMS agency leadership, hospital executives, and public health partners in 13 cities to identify where technology can be better used to close gaps and produce recommendations for strengthening emergency response.

When someone experiences cardiac arrest, a heart attack, or a stroke, reliable communication between dispatch, EMS crews, and receiving hospitals can mean the difference between life and death. Yet as mobile technologies—from telehealth platforms to mobile stroke units—rapidly transform emergency response, critical gaps in systems of care can arise. The AHA's initiative aims to address these gaps directly and foster the best use of technology in emergency response systems.

The initiative will be integrated into the AHA's Mission: Lifeline® EMS program to help systems of care work better together. Mission: Lifeline EMS engages more than 1,000 EMS agencies, building on an established national network of recognition and improvement. The initiative is part of the AHA’s Nation of Lifesavers movement, a national effort aiming to double survival rates from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest by 2030.

“When communication breaks down in the chain of survival, people die. This initiative translates our national mission into market-level action—working alongside EMS leaders to improve care in real communities,” said Kacey Kronenfeld, M.D., FAEMS, volunteer co-chair of the AHA’s EMS Task Force. “The American Heart Association is uniquely positioned to lead this work, in its role as a national convener shaping next-generation emergency response.”

In each of the 13 target markets—Atlanta, Boston, Buffalo, Charlotte, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Houston, Indianapolis, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco—the AHA will host regional system of care forums bringing together EMS leaders to identify and close communication and technology gaps. These forums will generate market-level insights that feed into national learning, comparative data analysis, and actionable improvement strategies. Annual national roundtables, co-hosted by the AHA and T-Mobile, will convene technology leaders from EMS agencies across the target markets to shape the future of emergency communication systems.

“Connectivity saves lives—and that's not just a tagline for us,” said Rod Cruz, vice president of growth and emerging businesses, T-Mobile. “Supporting the American Heart Association in improving how EMS teams, dispatchers and hospitals communicate is a natural extension of that commitment.”

With T-Mobile’s financial support, the AHA also will work to expand participation in Mission: Lifeline EMS recognition nationwide, encouraging more EMS agencies across the country to meet the program's standards for guideline-directed care in cardiac and stroke emergencies.

For business and technology leaders, this initiative underscores the critical role of connectivity and technology integration in emergency medical services. The focus on closing communication gaps highlights opportunities for technology providers to develop solutions that enhance interoperability and real-time data sharing among dispatch, EMS, and hospitals. The initiative's market-level approach also provides a model for how public-private partnerships can drive systematic improvements in healthcare delivery, potentially influencing future investments and policy in emergency response technology.

Editorial Staff

Editorial Staff

@editorial-staff

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