View allAll Photos Tagged Firstaid
HMCS REGINA and NRU ASTERIX conduct a Replenishment at Sea during Operation ARTEMIS in the Pacific Ocean on March 31 2019.
Photo: Corporal Stuart Evans, BORDEN Imaging Services
©2019 DND-MDN CANADA
XA01-2019-0035-369
6th Regiment, Advanced Camp practiced providing medical aid during Tactical Combat Casualty Care for Cadet Summer Training at Fort Knox, Ky. Cadets were assessed on how to properly provide medical aid using a tourniquet and field dressing to a mannequin. | Photo by 2nd Lt. Courtney Huhta, CST Public Affairs Office
Pictures from the CPR training Megan (who is a certified Red Cross CPR trainer) and Lou (trained in wilderness first aid) ran for some local volunteer disaster responders we work with.
Read a full account below...
www.jalalagood.com/2011/01/disaster-services/
Excerpt:
"Yesterday Megan and I taught CPR to a group of University Students who have taken it upon themselves to form a Disaster Response team and are trying to amass skills and knowledge that will be of use to them and their communities. One of the boys, Hameed, is part of our informal “geek squad” at the Taj and wrote the previous post on this blog. Of the four he was the only one who spoke fully fluent English. Two could get by in English and the fourth spoke none, although he was fluent in Pashto, Dari, Urdu and Russian. Many Afghans in this area can speak and read (if they are literate) Pashto, Dari and Urdu. If they are in their forties or fifties, they can get by in Russian. The younger generation tends to know dabbling of English. Pashto is the main spoken language but Dari seeps in from the West, Urdu from the East, and Western Languages trickle in through the occupying armies stationed here.
The class was punctuated by Hameed’s rapid fire translation, side conversations in Pashto, and the boys wrestling matches as they were a little overenthusiastic when practicing the Heimlich maneuver on one another. The best part of the class was the myriad of questions the boys had, indicating both a sincere desire to learn skills applicable to disasters they had witnessed first hand, as well as exposing deep seated cultural difficulties that never arose in my numerous First Aid re-certification classes."
6th Regiment, Advanced Camp practiced providing medical aid during Tactical Combat Casualty Care for Cadet Summer Training at Fort Knox, Ky. Cadets were assessed on how to properly provide medical aid using a tourniquet and field dressing to a mannequin. | Photo by 2nd Lt. Courtney Huhta, CST Public Affairs Office
I'm posting this photo for a friend— a NOLS WMI Wilderness Emergency Technician in Afghanistan. His shot shows treatment of an adult patient with high blood pressure, a rapid heart rate and dehydration.
EMS Response have the facilities to provide basic through to specialist medical services at your event. Due to our extensive experience within the healthcare industry and the events sector, we are able to offer you the complete medical provision. Our h
Staff Sgt. Samantha Taber, 3rd Battalion, 414th Infantry Regiment, grades a Cadet at the Tactical Combat Casualty Care lane for Cadet Summer Training at Fort Knox, Ky., July 6, 2022. Cadets at CST were assessed on how to provide medical aid in a combat situation. | Photo by 2nd Lt. Courtney Huhta, CST Public Affairs Office
6th Regiment, Advanced Camp practiced providing medical aid during Tactical Combat Casualty Care for Cadet Summer Training at Fort Knox, Ky. Cadets were assessed on how to properly provide medical aid using a tourniquet and field dressing to a mannequin. | Photo by 2nd Lt. Courtney Huhta, CST Public Affairs Office
4th Regiment, Advanced Camp Cadets trained and tested in First Aid on June 29, 2018 at Fort Knox, KY. Photo by: Jane Lee
Cadet Joshua Cockrell, The Citadel, is assessed at the Tactical Combat Casualty Care lane during Cadet Summer Training at Fort Knox, Ky., July 6, 2022. During this lane, Cadets were assessed on their knowledge of providing medical aid in a combat situation. | Photo by 2nd Lt. Courtney Huhta, CST Public Affairs Office
6th Regiment, Advanced Camp practiced providing medical aid during Tactical Combat Casualty Care for Cadet Summer Training at Fort Knox, Ky. Cadets were assessed on how to properly provide medical aid using a tourniquet and field dressing to a mannequin. | Photo by 2nd Lt. Courtney Huhta, CST Public Affairs Office
CPR & First Aid Training
Milwaukee County Office of Emergency Management
Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
May 2021
Photo by Asher Heimermann/Incident Response
Cadet Harrison Sokol, University of Michigan, and Cadet Mecadeez Durham, The Citadel, 4th Regiment, Advanced Camp, practice using a gurney during first aid training at Fort Knox, Ky., June 29th, 2023. During Cadet Summer Training, Cadets learn practical first aid methods to confidently know how to help each other in the field. | Lanie Guinn, Ball State University, CST Public Affairs Office
Cadet Harrison Sokol, University of Michigan, and Cadet Mecadeez Durham, The Citadel, 4th Regiment, Advanced Camp, practice using a gurney during first aid training at Fort Knox, Ky., June 29th, 2023. During Cadet Summer Training, Cadets learn practical first aid methods to confidently know how to help each other in the field. | Lanie Guinn, Ball State University, CST Public Affairs Office
Pictures from the CPR training Megan (who is a certified Red Cross CPR trainer) and Lou (trained in wilderness first aid) ran for some local volunteer disaster responders we work with.
Read a full account below...
www.jalalagood.com/2011/01/disaster-services/
Excerpt:
"Yesterday Megan and I taught CPR to a group of University Students who have taken it upon themselves to form a Disaster Response team and are trying to amass skills and knowledge that will be of use to them and their communities. One of the boys, Hameed, is part of our informal “geek squad” at the Taj and wrote the previous post on this blog. Of the four he was the only one who spoke fully fluent English. Two could get by in English and the fourth spoke none, although he was fluent in Pashto, Dari, Urdu and Russian. Many Afghans in this area can speak and read (if they are literate) Pashto, Dari and Urdu. If they are in their forties or fifties, they can get by in Russian. The younger generation tends to know dabbling of English. Pashto is the main spoken language but Dari seeps in from the West, Urdu from the East, and Western Languages trickle in through the occupying armies stationed here.
The class was punctuated by Hameed’s rapid fire translation, side conversations in Pashto, and the boys wrestling matches as they were a little overenthusiastic when practicing the Heimlich maneuver on one another. The best part of the class was the myriad of questions the boys had, indicating both a sincere desire to learn skills applicable to disasters they had witnessed first hand, as well as exposing deep seated cultural difficulties that never arose in my numerous First Aid re-certification classes."
3 medium size masks, used for first-aid training by secondary school children in Collège Jean Yole, Les Herbiers (France)
This is my first aid bag I take with me to rugby, camping, long hikes, ect... matches assorted band-aids, a glove, biohaz bag, saftey pins, rolaids, hand warmers, mixed pain meds, sciossors, aligator clamp, tweezer, strei-strips, stuff for bug bites, wipes for cleaning out wounds, floss, lip balm, tape, tissue, tooth picks, brush ups, zip ties, needle nose pliers, gauze, burn ointment