Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $14,911
18%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 18%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: firstaid

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Need help with an SOP

    08/09/2008 7:01:10 PM PDT · by Ronin · 69 replies · 1,565+ views
    Vanity | August 10, 2008 | Ronin
    In my new job I have just been handed the task of putting together a disaster readiness plan that addresses everything from building evacuation, first aid, logistics, and everything else. I got the job because for my sins, I am the only veteran in the company, and I was just a squid. If anyone else out there has experience in this sort of thing, I would appreciate some help. I have to have something on paper by 0900 tomorrow morning. The good news is I have (within reason) a blank check as to how to put it together and purchasing...
  • Experts now recommend hands-only CPR

    03/31/2008 7:17:03 PM PDT · by neverdem · 22 replies · 786+ views
    San Luis Obispo Tribune ^ | Mar. 31, 2008 | STEPHANIE NANO
    You can skip the mouth-to-mouth breathing and just press on the chest to save a life. In a major change, the American Heart Association said Monday that hands-only CPR - rapid, deep presses on the victim's chest until help arrives - works just as well as standard CPR for sudden cardiac arrest in adults. Experts hope bystanders will now be more willing to jump in and help if they see someone suddenly collapse. Hands-only CPR is simpler and easier to remember and removes a big barrier for people skittish about the mouth-to-mouth breathing. "You only have to do two things....
  • Face of Defense: Soldiers Teach Afghan Police First Aid

    02/29/2008 3:57:28 PM PST · by SandRat · 2 replies · 66+ views
    Face of Defence ^ | Sgt. Matthew Clifton, USA
    FORWARD OPERATING BASE SHANK, Afghanistan, Feb. 29, 2008 – Two combat medics have devoted their time to teaching Afghan police officers one of the most important soldier skills: first aid. New York Army National Guard Spc. Richard L. Bacher, a medic with 1st Battalion, 108th Infantry Regiment, , helps a student find his radial pulse during a first aid class given to Logar Province Afghan National Police, Feb. 20, 2008, at Forward Operating Base Shank, Afghanistan. Photo by Sgt. Matthew Clifton, USA  (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. Every other week, Army Sgt. 1st Class Maurice Wells, Joint Forces...
  • Airline disputes cousin's story of death

    02/25/2008 12:56:49 PM PST · by txlurker · 91 replies · 1,098+ views
    Yahoo News ^ | 02/25/2008 | By RICHARD PYLE, Associated Press Writer
    NEW YORK - American Airlines on Monday insisted it tried to help a passenger who died after complaining she couldn't breathe, and disputed the account of a relative who said that she was denied oxygen and that medical devices failed. The airline said the oxygen tanks and a defibrillator were working and noted that several medical professionals on the flight, including a doctor, tried to save passenger Carine Desir, 44, who had heart disease. "American Airlines, after investigation, has determined that oxygen was administered on the aircraft, and it was working, and the defibrillator was applied as well," airline spokesman...
  • Woman, 44, Dies on Plane With 2 Empty Oxygen Tanks

    02/25/2008 3:50:32 AM PST · by decimon · 170 replies · 4,131+ views
    ASSOCIATED PRESS ^ | February 25, 2008 | Unknown
    A passenger returning home to New York from Haiti collapsed and died aboard an American Airlines flight after a flight attendant first told her that he could not give her any oxygen, and then brought her an oxygen tank that was empty, a relative said on Sunday.< > Mr. Oliver said two doctors and two nurses who were aboard tried to administer oxygen from a second tank, which was also empty.< >Ms. Desir was pronounced dead by one of the doctors, Joel Shulkin, and the flight continued on to John F. Kennedy International Airport. Her body was moved to the...
  • Relative complains after death on flight (Empty Oygen Bottle)

    02/24/2008 8:14:18 PM PST · by Paleo Conservative · 121 replies · 383+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | Feb. 24, 2008, 9:16PM | RICHARD PYLE
    NEW YORK — An American Airlines passenger died after a flight attendant told her he couldn't give her any oxygen and then tried to help her with faulty equipment, including an empty oxygen tank, a relative said. The airline confirmed the flight death and said medical professionals had tried to save the passenger, Carine Desir, who was returning home to Brooklyn from Haiti. Desir, who had heart disease, died of natural causes, medical examiner's office spokeswoman Ellen Borakove said Sunday. Desir had complained of not feeling well and being very thirsty on the Friday flight from Port-au-Prince after she ate...
  • Doing the Right Thing Brings Lifes Rewards - Wuli

    12/19/2007 1:34:00 PM PST · by Wuli · 12 replies · 194+ views
    12/19/2007 | Wuli
    I have been away for 16 days. Were it not for the actions of one man, it may have been much longer before I could be here, writing this, and maybe this writing may not have been possible. On December 3rd I was mugged by a falling tree, at least that is what the eyewitnesses say. My memory of the events begins only much later, when I here the voice of Rabbi Yehoshua Kaganoff telling me not to move, that everything is O.K., that the EMT crew is on the way - as sat holding me, with one arm around...
  • Gunman's writings were disturbing (Eagle Scout saves his life by applying a tourniquet from a cord)

    04/17/2007 2:22:21 PM PDT · by Coleus · 119 replies · 4,041+ views
    Chron.com ^ | 04.17.07 | MATT APUZZO
    BLACKSBURG, Va. — The gunman in the Virginia Tech massacre was a sullen loner who alarmed professors and classmates with his twisted, blood-drenched creative writing and left a rambling note in his dorm room raging against women and rich kids.  A chilling picture emerged Tuesday of Cho Seung-Hui — a 23-year-old senior majoring in English — a day after the bloodbath that left 33 people dead, including Cho, who killed himself as police closed in. News reports said that he may have been taking medication for depression and that he was becoming increasingly violent and erratic. Despite the many warning...
  • Chainsaw man stayed alive by keeping cool (Slice of Life DownUnder NZ)

    03/10/2007 12:28:34 AM PST · by DieHard the Hunter · 12 replies · 1,936+ views
    The Dominion Post (New Zealand) ^ | 10 March 2007 | Kay Blundell
    Chainsaw man stayed alive by keeping cool KAY BLUNDELLThe Dominion PostSaturday, 10 March 2007 Grit and determination to get help without blacking out was the difference between life and death for a Waikanae man who sliced open his face with a chainsaw. Chas Marshall, 35, was cutting firewood for a friend in End Farm Rd, Waikanae, last Wednesday when his chainsaw kicked back into his face, inflicting a deep cut from his eyebrows to his chin. "For a split second I did not know what happened – it just kicked back. "I was numb, I could not feel anything, just...
  • Cavalry teaches Iraqis advanced first aid

    01/10/2007 5:33:03 PM PST · by SandRat · 4 replies · 270+ views
    Multi-National Forces-Iraq ^ | Sgt. Paula Taylor
    COP NIMUR — Troops from 3rd Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment, attached to the 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, spent four days training Iraqi security forces in first aid, and provided them with some advanced medical techniques at Combat Outpost Nimur. The class consisted of 28 Iraqi Army soldiers, four Sinjar area Iraqi police and five Iraqi border policemen. One of the instructors of the course was Sgt. Richard Kyle, combat medic, Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 3-4 Cavalry, a unit based out of Schofield Barracks, Hawaii. “We were teaching them the Combat Lifesaver course,” he explained. “This was an...
  • Martinsville High School Student Chokes to Death at School (Teacher prevented 911 call)

    03/10/2006 8:43:53 PM PST · by Samwise · 305 replies · 6,676+ views
    Several Martinsville High School students say teachers stopped their calls to 911 while a fellow student was choking, because cell phones aren't allowed on campus. Witnesses tell police the victim was rushing to finish his lunch before leaving the cafeteria, because you can't bring food outside. That's when they say he started choking, went into cardiac arrest, and died at the hospital. Multiple 911 calls went out from Martinsville High School. Witnesses say Jesse Tucker choked on a hamburger. Paramedics rushed the 15 year-old freshman to the hospital, where he later died. "It's really hard to grasp the fact that...
  • CPR Guidelines Updated With Doubling of Chest Compressions

    11/29/2005 5:11:27 AM PST · by Born Conservative · 7 replies · 6,194+ views
    MedPage Today ^ | 11/28/2005 | Katrina Woznicki
    DALLAS. Nov. 28 - When it comes to CPR, doubling the number of chest compressions and delivering them more quickly is the key to saving a life, according to the American Heart Association's revised guidelines issued today. The updated guidelines call for 30 chest compressions delivered hard and fast for every two breaths administered by a single rescuer aiding a patient with cardiac arrest. That's a doubling from the 15:2 ratio, or 15 chest compressions for every two breaths, previously recommended. The guidelines, intended for everyone from bystanders to trained paramedics, were presented at a press conference here and were...
  • Research shows 20-minute CPR class works

    11/14/2005 6:26:40 PM PST · by neverdem · 13 replies · 672+ views
    Seattle Post-Intelligencer ^ | November 14, 2005 | JAMIE STENGLE
    ASSOCIATED PRESS DALLAS -- Too busy to take a four-hour CPR course? New research shows the lifesaving procedure can be effectively taught in a little more than 20 minutes. The finding, presented Sunday at an American Heart Association meeting in Dallas, could broadly expand the number of Americans who can perform CPR. "It's brilliant," said Dr. Lance Becker, director of the Emergency Resuscitation Center at the University of Chicago. "I think it's going to make our ability to train people much, much easier." The study, led by Dr. Ahamed Idris, professor of emergency medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern...
  • FYI: Why does poison ivy make me itch?

    09/25/2005 10:07:52 AM PDT · by yankeedame · 10 replies · 6,335+ views
    Poison Ivy Basics Poison ivy is a red, itchy rash caused by the plant that bears its name. Many people get it when they are hiking or working in their garden and accidentally come into direct contact with the plant's leaves, roots, or stems. The poison ivy rash often looks like red lines, and sometimes it forms blisters. The culprit behind the rash is a chemical in the sap of poison ivy plants called urushiol (oo-roo-shee-ohl). Its name comes from the Japanese word "urushi," meaning lacquer. Urushiol is the same substance that triggers an allergic reaction when people touch...
  • Video Depicting Terrorists´ Use of UN Ambulance Released....link to video included

    05/31/2004 1:15:41 AM PDT · by priceofreedom · 4 replies · 1,922+ views
    Arutz Sheva ^ | 01:37 May 31, '04 / 11 Sivan 5764
    Video Depicting Terrorists´ Use of UN Ambulance Released 01:37 May 31, '04 / 11 Sivan 5764 A new video, made available over the Internet, clearly depicts Arab terrorists using a United Nations ambulance as a getaway car during recent Gaza attacks. Much has been reported – albeit not in the Western press – about United Nations and Red Crescent vehicles transporting terrorists and firearms. Now a web site called Access Middle East has obtained footage taken on May 11 in Gaza's Zeitoun district by a Reuters cameraman of UN ambulances being used by Arab terrorists to transport weapons and personnel....
  • Vacationing Navy nurses help save life of stricken man on plane (American spirit bump)

    04/09/2004 1:57:40 PM PDT · by bogdanPolska12 · 12 replies · 138+ views
    www.stripes.com ^ | By Chiyomi Sumida and Fred Zimmerman
    CAMP LESTER, Okinawa — Two U.S. Naval Hospital Okinawa nurses recently helped save the life of a Japanese man who was showing signs of a heart attack during a flight into Naha International Airport. Navy Lts. Carolyn Currie, a women’s health nurse practitioner, and her husband, Dante Villecco, Intensive Care Unit assistant division officer, administered care to Yuji Omori, 61, on a March 21 China Airlines flight from Taipei to Naha. Omori, who is from Tokyo, was returning to Okinawa after two days of golf with friends in Taiwan. He has been on Okinawa since December 2003 for a construction...
  • Some emergency officials question the use of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation

    04/06/2004 4:31:26 AM PDT · by Born Conservative · 13 replies · 185+ views
    Times Leader/AP ^ | 4/6/2004 | MARGARET STAFFORD
    KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Bystanders who want to help a heart attack victim are increasingly being told by 911 dispatchers to skip the mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and concentrate on giving chest compressions until medical help arrives. Driven by medical surveys and continued public resistance to giving mouth-to-mouth, emergency medical groups across the country have either changed or are considering changing the traditional instructions given over the phone to untrained individuals helping a heart attack victim. "If someone is going to do nothing because they are apprehensive about doing mouth-to-mouth, it is simple to tell them to find the middle of the...
  • WARLORDS Perform First Aid in Air

    03/11/2004 5:48:33 PM PST · by UncleHambone · 4 replies · 217+ views
    Skywriter NAF Atsugi's newspaper ^ | 5 March 2004 | By LTj.g. Shaun Lynch
    WARLORDS perform first aid in air By LTj.g. Shaun Lynch HSL 51 Public Affairs This past Friday the 13th started out no differently than any other day for nine crewmen from Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron Light 51 (HSL 51) as they departed NAF to attend training in San Diego. What they couldn’t know was that, before the end of this most notorious day of the year, their spirit and military training would be put to the test. Approximately three hours into their flight, Aviation Warfare Systems Operator 1st Class (AW1) Ed Lyon observed a Japanese citizen collapse while standing in the...
  • Clotting agents buy wounded troops life-saving time

    04/13/2003 7:34:24 PM PDT · by 11th_VA · 30 replies · 561+ views
    Stars and Stripes ^ | Monday, April 14, 2003 | By David Allen
    U.S. troops in the Persian Gulf were sent into battle with medical innovations that are proving their promise to cut the number of battlefield deaths due to excessive bleeding. They’ve been designed to control bleeding by speeding up the clotting process. The most successful so far, according to preliminary battlefield reports, is a powder called QuikClot that one day will be standard Marine Corps issue for every individual first- aid kit. QuikClot is a granular substance similar to a clay powder that can be poured directly onto a wound, almost instantly forming a clot and stopping bleeding. It works by...
  • Blood-Clotting Bandage May Save Soldiers

    02/25/2003 8:02:10 AM PST · by Indy Pendance · 326+ views
    AP ^ | February 25, 2003 | MITCH STACY
    TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- As the United States threatens war against Iraq, soldiers are being armed with the newest medical technology, including an experimental bandage soaked in a blood-clotting agent that may save lives on the battlefield. The 4-by-4-inch cloth bandage could be specially helpful for wounds in the neck, groin or armpit, where bleeding is particularly hard to stop. On remote battlefields, wounded soldiers might otherwise die before reaching a hospital.Special Operations also has developed a tourniquet that can be applied with one hand. Researchers are working on other bandages to accelerate natural blood-clotting abilities, including one made from...