When cardiac arrest strikes, immediate CPR can double or even triple a person's chance of survival, yet more than half of people who collapse outside a hospital do not receive it. To help close that gap, the American Heart Association and the National Football League, along with Damar Hamlin's Chasing M's Foundation, will welcome thousands to the field at Acrisure Stadium to be trained in Hands-Only CPR at the NFL Draft.
The Hands-Only CPR training will take place Friday, April 24, from 1:00-2:00 p.m. ET at Acrisure Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pa., during day two of the NFL Draft. The effort is designed to empower fans, families and communities with a simple, lifesaving skill they are most likely to use to help someone they know and love. Registration is free and open for participation at heart.org/NFLDraft.
"Every second matters when someone experiences cardiac arrest and knowing how to perform CPR can be the difference between life and death," said Nancy Brown, chief executive officer of the American Heart Association. "By bringing thousands of people together at the NFL Draft, we're teaming up with the league and Damar Hamlin to equip individuals with the confidence and skills to act when it matters most."
Participants will also join the Nation of Lifesavers, a global movement launched by the American Heart Association in 2023 following the sudden cardiac arrest of NFL player Damar Hamlin during Monday Night Football. Hamlin has used his experience to show the lifesaving difference bystander CPR can make through his collaboration with the Heart Association to offer CPR trainings across the country.
"As my experience with cardiac arrest has shown, CPR saves lives," said Hamlin, Buffalo Bills Safety and National Ambassador for the Nation of Lifesavers. "Training in CPR during the NFL Draft Experience in my hometown of Pittsburgh is a full-circle moment for me, and I'm proud to see the NFL, the American Heart Association, and our community come together to build a life-saving legacy."
More than 90% of people who experience sudden cardiac arrest without immediate CPR do not survive, according to the American Heart Association. Yet learning Hands-Only CPR takes as little as 90 seconds and requires no formal training, making large-scale moments like this one a powerful step to improving survival rates.
Beyond the NFL Draft, the collaboration between the American Heart Association and the NFL continues year-round. Through the NFL Foundation, each team receives CPR grants to help expand CPR training and automated external defibrillator access in local communities. Since 2023, grants have supported Hands-Only CPR training, Heartsaver CPR AED credentialing, and the placement of CPR in Schools Kits and CPR Youth Sports Kits.
Hands-Only CPR education is also a key component of NFL PLAY 60 youth health and wellness efforts, delivered in partnership with the American Heart Association through the Kids Heart Challenge and American Heart Challenge. Students and families learn how to recognize cardiac arrest, call 9-1-1 and take action by pushing hard and fast in the center of the chest—skills that can save lives at any age.
With nearly 3 out of 4 cardiac arrests outside of the hospital occurring in homes, knowing how to perform CPR is critically important. If a teen or adult collapses, witnesses should immediately call 9-1-1 emergency services and begin chest compressions at a rate of 100-120 beats per minute and a depth of approximately two inches. Hands-Only CPR is chest compression-only CPR. Learn CPR today at www.heart.org/nation.


