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Ongoing Safety Training
A Case for Emergency Medical Preparedness
BY ANTHONY CURCI |
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After a two-year
investigation of today’s emergency medical response systems and
emergency rooms, researchers at the Institute of Medicine found 911
centers are sometimes unreliable, patients get turned away due
to overcrowding and emergency rooms are lacking in the resources
needed to treat victims. Such findings make it more important than
ever for individuals to safeguard themselves and others with
emergency preparedness education and ongoing training.
The Institute of Medicine’s findings echo other studies that are a
reminder of the need for emergency medical preparedness and ongoing
training.
Whether assigned to a CEO, company president, safety officer, or
human resources employee, safety training and implementation should
be ongoing business. A First Aid/Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation or
Automated External Defibrillator class or a rigorous hands-on
training can help minimize workplace risk. However, preparedness and
safety is more than a class taken once a year. Such variables as
retention rates, access to immediate information and EMS response
time must be considered when planning for workplace safety.
Studies demonstrate that retention rates for CPR are dismally low.
In one study, only one third of trained participants could
effectively perform CPR six months after their initial training. In
fact, rates of retention have been shown to drop off dramatically
after just a few weeks. Such findings support the argument for
having more than one trained person in each department. Across the
country the response time of EMS ranges from seven to 20 minutes.
The first four to six minutes are the most crucial after an
emergency and in those minutes, the victim’s life may be in the
hands of a lay responder until professional help arrives. Time is of
the essence. When a bystander performs CPR, a victim’s chance of
surviving cardiac arrest can be doubled or tripled.
According to OSHA, approximately 400 workplace deaths from cardiac
arrest occur annually. Along with personal impacts, these injuries
have an economic effect; recent statistics show workplace injuries
cost Americans $156.2 billion—which is an average cost of $1,120 per
worker.
The National Safety Council is one of many non-profit advocacy
groups that recommend all adults learn CPR and first aid techniques
in order to be competent to give assistance when injuries occur.
Solutions
• Provide an extension of formal training. Preparedness and training
starts with a class, but does not end there. Recognize the need for
ongoing training and for more than one person —or even one person
per department—to be trained in the workplace.
• Make everyone accountable. Encourage employees to keep skills
fresh and provide incentives
when they demonstrate skill mastery.
• Provide a variety of accessible education resources. People learn
and retain information
through a variety of methods. Utilize Web sites, pamphlets,
videos/DVDs, emergency
instruction devices, charts, pictures and audio-visual resources.
• Schedule unannounced drills. In school, children learn the
importance of being prepared
for fire, tornado and earthquake drills. Run drills with different
scenarios.
• Make learning first aid/CPR a part of new employee training.
Foster an atmosphere
from the beginning that sets the tone for safety responsibility.
In addition to increasing first aid retention skills, ongoing
training can foster a safety aware
environment and culture and that nurtures confidence for responding
effectively and
quickly during a medical emergency situation.
FSM
Anthony
Curci is the president and CEO of SafetyMate Corporation. Based
in Irvine, California, SafetyMate Corporation developed SafetyMate,
a verbal, emergency instruction training device with the most common
emergency protocols. SafetyMate offers information in both English
and Spanish and is also available to the commercial and
education sectors. SafetyMate is designed to help individuals learn
the procedures for
handling a medical emergency and give them confidence to take
appropriate action.
For more information, visit www.safetymate.com. |
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