HELP SAVE A LIFE IN YOUR COMMUNITY! ADD YOUR AED TO THE NETWORK.
Thank you for placing your AED onto this website along with hundreds of other like minded people, whose aims are to use this effective way of starting the heart after a cardiac arrest.
A pilot scheme has already been working successfully for over two years in the Chew Valley area of North Somerset (about 9 miles south of Bristol), where sixteen defibrillators are now situated and the numbers growing on a weekly basis. A local GP referred to Chew Valley as ‘Death Valley’ which is now considered to be the ‘Safest’ rural location to reside in if cardiac arrest should occur – perhaps the name should now be ‘Safe Valley’!
Latest News! Each week another community becomes HeartSafe®. Click here for the latest HeartSafe® locations.
If you already have an AED please read on.Sharing your AED with others is the ultimate offer you can make in a life threatening situation where a cardiac arrest is suspected.
You may already have an AED which you might want to display for the general public and community to use or you may be about to install a new AED in your street, village, business premises, sports ground, home or community. For further information please see AED Locations page.
To add your Public Access Defibrillator (PAD) to our database please complete the form below. All fields are required:
For help completing the form or if you require further information please contact us via the Contact Page.

All AEDs that are to be placed in cabinets are recommended to be initially commissioned by the Ambulance Service that operate in the area so that the Ambulance Service is acquainted with the device that is being installed.
It is likely that the Ambulance Service will log the existence/location of the AED on the systems used in their Control Centres that respond to 999 calls received from the public. Each of the regional Ambulance Services may offer a different protocol but most of them are very keen to help communities establish PADs.
Please contact us for advice on how the Chew Valley Initiative commenced with the support given by the Great Western Ambulance Service