Taylor Wimpey donates lifesaving defibrillator in Whitburn

Taylor Wimpey donates lifesaving defibrillator in Whitburn

Deryck Schendel, Taylor Wimpey’s regional health and safety advisor, (centre) with (from left) Liam Docherty, Paul Docherty, Deacon Ronnie Macaulay, Allison Gilchrist, Marco Marzella, Fr Sebastian, John Devlin, Whitburn CDT chair and Stephen Fairley

Taylor Wimpey East Scotland has donated a public access defibrillator (PAD) to St Joseph’s Church in Whitburn to benefit the community in the immediate local area.

As part of a joint initiative with the British Heart Foundation (BHF), the homebuilder is donating potentially life-saving PAD’s to communities around the UK to help people who suffer from an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

During 2019, the BHF worked with Taylor Wimpey to train its employees in CPR skills and to provide every one of their building sites in the UK with a defibrillator. As part of its commitment to leaving a lasting legacy in the areas in which it builds, Taylor Wimpey is donating the defibrillators to local communities when their developments are completed.



While work is completed for now at its nearby Heartlands development a defibrillator has been made available to St Joseph’s Church in Whitburn, and it is now located within an external cabinet off Raeburn Crescent within the grounds of the church.

Taylor Wimpey has also committed to ensuring all of its defibrillators are registered on The Circuit – the national defibrillator network, which connects defibrillators to NHS ambulance services across the UK, so that in those crucial moments after a cardiac arrest they can be accessed quickly to help save lives.

Taylor Wimpey donates lifesaving defibrillator in Whitburn

Members of the St Joseph’s Church receive defibrillator training from Taylor Wimpey’s Deryck Schendel

Deryck Schendel, regional health and safety advisor for Taylor Wimpey in Scotland, said: “It’s so important to us that we give something back to the communities in which we’re building. Our partnership with the BHF is vitally important in helping to ensure that more defibrillators are available for people who might need them and we are proud to be able to make this equipment readily accessible in Whitburn.”



Estelle Stephenson, survival programme lead at the British Heart Foundation, said: “More than 30,000 people suffer a cardiac arrest outside of hospital every year but less than one in ten survive. More people could be saved if everyone felt confident performing CPR and using a public access defibrillator.

“We are delighted that Taylor Wimpey has contributed to the aims of the BHF by making a public access defibrillator available at St Joseph’s Church in Whitburn. It could really make the difference between life and death.”

Deacon Ronnie, spokesman for St Joseph’s Church, added: “We can’t thank Taylor Wimpey and the BHF enough for this defibrillator. While we hope that we don’t have to use it, it’s fantastic to know that we can access a defibrillator in the event of an emergency and hopefully help to save someone’s life.”

David MacDonald from Whitburn and District Community Development Trust said: “Thank you to Taylor Wimpey for working in partnership with the CDT to donate the public access defibrillator to St Joseph’s Church in Whitburn. This kind donation expands the network of life saving devices across the town which can help save someone’s life.”


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