Wash your hands, wear your mask, 6 feet apart, just a few phrases that are now ingrained in our heads. You don’t even think about these things anymore, you just do them. Now let’s imagine an industrial accident at your plant. An employee has their arm stuck in a machine and is bleeding profusely, or a car accident where your loved one has arterial bleeding coming from their shoulder. Time is not on your side, and you are sitting there trying to remember what you learned 2-3 years prior in your bleeding control breakout session of class.
You see, there is a reason why seasoned airline passengers sit down, buckle their seat belts, put their tray tables up and stow their items under the seat in front of them. Day after day, they hear the flight attendant say the same 3-minute speech, so it becomes muscle memory. Did you know the average human only hears about 20% of what someone says to them? You may be asking where we’re going with this. Well, it’s quite simple, it’s the importance of refresher training.
Regular refresher training helps individuals remember important but seldom-used information. Many times refresher courses reveal knowledge gaps and training needs within the organization. It’s like learning a foreign language. If you don’t use it, you lose it. When we look at Active Shooter Events, we must remind ourselves of the time gap between the actual violence and medical personal arriving on the scene. Studies show that the average response time for EMS in these events could be much longer than the 3-5 minute window an individual has to bleed out.
Skills such as tourniquet application, wound packing, chest seals; where and when to use them is a skill that must always be refreshed. Our goal is to build muscle memory and provide refresher trainings that continually review and practice these skills.
A few questions to determine if you need a refresher training:
- Where do tourniquets go?
- How high do they stay on?
- How tight do we apply them?
- Where on the body do we wound pack?
If you find yourself pondering these questions or asking a coworker, then contact us today to schedule your refresher class.