Tag Archives: Kathy Hogan-Flinn

Peyton Walker Foundation, UPMC Pinnacle donate life-saving devices to Harrisburg Police Bureau

The Peyton Walker Foundation and UPMC Pinnacle on Tuesday donated AEDs to the Harrisburg Police Bureau.

In 2013, Julie Walker lost her 19-year-old daughter, Peyton, to sudden cardiac arrest. Now, she’s helping to make sure that doesn’t happen to other families.

It was announced on Tuesday that UPMC Pinnacle Harrisburg has partnered with Walker’s The Peyton Walker Foundation to donate 18 Automated External Defibrillators (AEDs) to the Harrisburg Police Bureau.

“I’ve met so many families who also lost a child or a loved one to sudden cardiac arrest and most often during cardiac arrest, there was not an AED available,” Walker said. “AEDs are a critical tool to saving someone who is in cardiac arrest.”

The about $40,500 to purchase the AEDs came from funds raised last September at UPMC Pinnacle’s annual “3.2 to Protect the Blue 5k” race, along with additional funds from UPMC.

According to Kathy Hogan Flinn, director of emergency nursing at UPMC Pinnacle, the police bureau only had two AEDs, which is why they decided to direct funds that way.

The donation comes during Sudden Cardiac Arrest Awareness Month. According to the foundation, SCA is “the sudden onset of an abnormal and potentially fatal heart rhythm that causes the heart to beat ineffectively or not at all” and is one of the leading causes of death in the United States.

The AEDs will be placed in Harrisburg police cruisers. The Peyton Walker Foundation will provide training for officers on how to use the devices. In recent years, the foundation has provided training and over 115 AEDs to schools and organizations.

“The Peyton Walker Foundation and UPMC, we thank you so much,” said police Commissioner Thomas Carter. “This will come in very handy for us.”

In July, Gov. Tom Wolf signed “Peyton’s Law” to educate student-athletes and parents on SCA and the importance of EKG testing for discovering issues that could lead to SCA.

The new law requires the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association (PIAA) to include information on EKG testing on forms that student-athletes receive.

“Working together, we are protecting hearts and saving lives so that the beat goes on,” Walker said.

UPMC Pinnacle Harrisburg is located at 111 S. Front St. For more information, visit their website. The Peyton Walker Foundation is located at 2929 Gettysburg Rd., Suite 8, Camp Hill. For more information, visit their website.

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Harrisburg police demonstrate new protective gear, following donation from UPMC Pinnacle

Harrisburg Police Commissioner Thomas Carter introduced the bureau’s new protective gear, featured on the table.

Harrisburg police today showed off a pile of new protective gear, equipment it purchased with a grant from UPMC Pinnacle.

At a press conference this morning, the city’s police bureau shared samples of new vests, helmets and steel plates, part of about 120 pieces of protective gear that will help protect officers from lethal, high-caliber weapons, according to police Commissioner Thomas Carter.

In total, UPMC Pinnacle donated more than $40,000 for the equipment purchase. That figure includes about $20,000 raised last June from the “3.2 to Protect the Blue” race, which was organized by UPMC Pinnacle emergency room nurses, with the UPMC Pinnacle Foundation donating much of the remainder.

“I had no idea of the dedication and love that these people showed our officers,” said Carter, flanked by UPMC nurses and Harrisburg police officers.

The new gear includes 60 helmets, 40 “body armor level 3 ballistic” protective vests with steel plates and 20 additional steel plates, which can be inserted into the vests. The purchase was made through Royersford, Pa.-based Body Armor Megastore, which contributed another 10 armor body vest sets.

Carter said that the need for the equipment arose last year following the death of U.S. Deputy Marshal Christopher Hill during a raid on a house in Allison Hill. The bureau realized that its helmets and vests were not adequate to protect against today’s powerful firearms, he said.

“UPMC Pinnacle ED [emergency department] physicians and nurses have a great bond with the Harrisburg Police Department,” said Kathy Hogan-Flinn, nursing director of emergency services at UPMC Pinnacle. “Upon learning that they needed money to purchase protective trauma vests and equipment, our nurses sprang into action, and the ‘3.2 to Protect the Blue’ was born.”

Deputy Police Chief Deric Moody said that his officers will not wear the equipment regularly, but will keep it nearby in case it’s needed.

“The equipment will remain in vehicles most times,” he said. “If an officer is dispatched to a threat, they will have it on really quick.”

After the press conference, Mayor Eric Papenfuse stressed that the equipment was not the full body armor “riot gear” that the bureau requested in 2017, after high-profile clashes throughout the city between “anti-Sharia” protestors and “antifa” counter-protestors. That gear was already purchased following a $68,000 allocation from City Council, he said.

Both Harrisburg and UPMC Pinnacle representatives today said that they hoped the gear would help prevent gun-related injuries and deaths among officers.

“They see the tragic effect of gun violence in our country,” Papenfuse said, of the UPMC Pinnacle emergency room nurses. “So, they banded together.”

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