Public Access Hemorrhage (bleeding) control is SLOWLY gaining ground. Stop the Bleed campaigns are popping up as “add-ons” in already established Hands-Only CPR events, yearly Run, Hide, Fight! training and as standalone just-in-time training. Is one course better than the others? Which one meets your needs or expectations? While each of these courses present basically the same concepts and principles which is: you can save a life if you learn a few simple skills. Another common mantra is: nobody should bleed to death.
Continue reading for an overview of 3 courses that are rapidly gaining popularity, decide which one is right for:
- You
- Your family
- Your faith based organization
- Your workplace
- Your youth group
Click Here to contact Responder Solutions Group to schedule a course and let our experienced instructors get you Ready to Train and Trained to be Ready!
FEMA: Until Help Arrives
- Life-threatening emergencies can happen fast. Emergency responders aren’t always nearby. You may be able to save a life by taking simple actions immediately. You Are the Help Until Help Arrives.
- When someone experiences a life-threatening emergency, the first care they can get can be the difference between life and death. In fact, you never know when you might find yourself in a situation where someone, a stranger perhaps, needs immediate medical help for a life-threatening injury. You are the most important help available to someone with a serious, life-threatening injury.
GOAL: The overall goal of this course is to teach participants basic skills to keep people with Life threatening injuries alive until professional help arrives.
COURSE OBJECTIVES:
At the end of this course, participants will be able to:
- Use simple and effective skills to save lives.
- Communicate with 9-1-1 operators effectively.
- Act to protect the injured from further harm.
- Position the injured.
- Stop life-threatening bleeding.
- Provide emotional support.
TARGET AUDIENCE AND SIZE:
- Teens and Adults with limited or no first aid training; it is recommended that there be at least 1 instructor for every 15 students.
COURSE LENGTH:
- Approximately 3 hours.
COURSE OUTLINE
The course includes six topics along with a Welcome and a Conclusion. Each topic uses a mix of lecture, group activity, multimedia presentations, demonstrations, and practical exercises.
- Topic 1: You Make a Difference – Participants learn about the critical role they play in the emergency medical response system, discuss why people act, and learn about how their minds and bodies may respond under stress.
- Topic 2: Call 9-1-1 – Participants learn how to effectively communicate with a 9-1-1 operator.
- Topic 3: Stay Safe – Participants learn how to assess a life-threatening situation and how to move the injured away from further harm.
- Topic 4: Stop the Bleeding – Participants learn how to apply pressure and use a tourniquet to stop bleeding.
- Topic 5: Position the Injured – Participants learn proper positioning techniques for those who are conscious and unconscious.
- Topic 6: Provide Comfort – Participants learn about providing physical and emotional comfort to the injured.
- Before You Go: Prepare to Help – Participants learn about resources and additional training available to them.
Stop the Bleed:
bleedingcontrol.org / American College of Surgeons / NAEMT & Partners
- No matter how rapid the arrival of professional emergency responders, bystanders will always be first on the scene. A person who is bleeding can die from blood loss within five minutes, therefore it is important to quickly stop the blood loss. Those nearest to someone with life threatening injuries are best positioned to provide first care.
- Launched in October of 2015 by the White House, Stop the Bleed is a national awareness campaign and a call to action. Stop the Bleed is intended to cultivate grassroots efforts that encourage bystanders to become trained, equipped, and empowered to help in a bleeding emergency before professional help arrives. According to a recent National Academies of Science study, trauma is the leading cause of death for Americans under age 46.
Partners:
- American College of Surgeons, the Committee on Trauma, and the Hartford Consensus
- Combat Casualty Care Research Program
- Department of Homeland Security
- Federal Bureau of Investigation
- Federal Emergency Management Agency
- The Hartford
- Johnson & Johnson
- Major Cities Chiefs Police Association
- National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians
- Tactical Combat Casualty Care
- US. Department of Defense
- US. Fire Administration
GOAL: Our shared goal is to provide you with a one-stop, online resource to credible information on bleeding control. We hope you will never need to use this information, but if you do, at least you will have the assurance that the information is credible and timely.
- Today we live in a world where terrorism, the actions of unstable people, and the dangerous impulses of friends and relatives are very real and becoming increasingly more frequent.
- Massive bleeding from any cause, but particularly from an active shooter or explosive event where a response is delayed can result in death. Similar to how the general public learns and performs CPR, the public must learn proper bleeding control techniques, including how to use their hands, dressings, and tourniquets. Victims can quickly die from uncontrolled bleeding, within five to 10 minutes.
- However, anyone at the scene can act as immediate responder and save lives if they know what to do. BleedingControl.org supports President Barack Obama’s policy directive for national preparedness (Presidential Policy Directive 8), which targets preparedness as a shared responsibility of the government, the private and nonprofit sectors, and individual citizens.
- bleedingcontrol.org is an initiative of the American College of Surgeons and the Hartford Consensus and contains diagrams, news, videos, and other resources contributed by a variety of other private and nonprofit partners to help prepare you in the event you are witness to one of these unspeakable events.
COURSE OBJECTIVES:
At the end of this course, participants will be able to:
- Understand the importance of ensuring your own safety
- Communicate with 911 operators effectively
- Locate a bleeding injury
- Apply pressure to stop a bleeding injury
- Properly apply an arterial tourniquet
- Effectively Pack a wound with gauze or a clean cloth.
- Use simple and effective skills to save lives.
TARGET AUDIENCE & SIZE:
- Teens / Young adults / Adults with limited or no first aid training.
- It is recommended that there be at least 1 instructor for every 9 students.
COURSE LENGTH:
- 5 – 3 hours
COURSE OUTLINE:
- Introduction
- Primary Principles of Trauma Care Response
- The ABCs of Bleeding
- Ensure Your Own Safety
- A – Alert – call 9-1-1
- B – Bleeding
- C – Compress
- Covering the wound with a clean cloth and applying pressure
- Using a tourniquet,
- Wound Packing (stuffing) the wound with gauze
- Summary
First Care Provider
GOAL: to improve our communities’ resilience to disaster. While traditional response to natural disasters and active violence will always be reactive, we’ve created a system to empower people before, during and immediately after a traumatic event.
Our Mission:
To serve the public by raising awareness of the need for civilian response to disaster, and to create an integrated network of individuals and communities empowered to ensure not another civilian life is lost from a preventable cause of death as a result of trauma.
COURSE OBJECTIVES:
RACE2Safety!
- React! – to the threat! Run, Hide, Fight!
- Activate! – Your emergency system
- CARE™!
- Control Bleeding -direct pressure / TQ
- Airway – recovery position
- Respirations – cover open chest wounds
- Exposure – control heat loss
- Evacuate! – Evacuate to rescue
TARGET AUDIENCE & SIZE:
- Teens / Young adults / Adults with limited or no first aid training.
- Not published on website. My personal recommendation is at least 1 instructor for every 9 students.
COURSE LENGTH:
Approximately 2.5 – 3 hrs?
COURSE OUTLINE:
**Unable to find a published outline at the time of this writing**