A LIFE-saving defibrillator has been installed in Prescot this week, after the life-saving machines have been used three times in the past six months in Knowsley.

The new Automated External Defibrillators (AED) will be placed on Eccleston Street in Prescot, is easy to use and could save the life of a person who’s suffered a sudden cardiac arrest.

Since 2013, Knowsley Council has provided defibrillators to every school and children’s centre in the borough, along with Volair leisure centres and publicly-accessible buildings.

The council’s Occupational Health and Safety team has also trained around 800 staff in these locations in how to use the AEDs.

Working in partnership with the Oliver King Foundation - set up in memory of 12-year-old Oliver, who sadly died at his Liverpool school in March 2011 from Sudden Arrhythmic Death Syndrome (SADS) - the council has now expanded the initiative to provide AEDs in the following town centre locations:

More defibrillators will be installed in other locations over the coming weeks.

Knowsley Council’s cabinet lead member for resources, Cllr Terry Byron, said: “I’m delighted that we are able to expand this vitally important initiative and provide even more defibrillators across Knowsley.

“Research shows that if defibrillation is delivered promptly after someone suffers a cardiac arrest, their chances of survival increase dramatically to as much as 75 per cent.

“We have seen three lives saved in Knowsley this year thanks to the use of defibrillators installed in our schools, children’s centres, leisure centres and publicly-accessible buildings.”

Mark King from the Oliver King Foundation said: “It has been an absolute pleasure working in partnership with Knowsley Council to make sure that every child and member of staff is in a safe working and learning environment.

“I’m so pleased that the initiative has expanded even further across Knowsley with defibrillators being installed in three main shopping areas with more to follow.”