st599
Well-Known Member
£8 !!St Johns Ambulance Supplies sell them for about 60p....
Proper one with non return valve? https://m.spservices.co.uk/item/Brand_SPEmergencyCPRFaceMaskwithOneWayValve_51_0_1305_0.html
£8 !!St Johns Ambulance Supplies sell them for about 60p....
I understand that the RYA base the syllabus and the course duration based on students with no prior knowledge. Unfortunately most courses are populated by students who are repeating the course for the Nth time because they have to and hence are basically bored by the whole thing.
Much better would be a revision course for these people.
I understand that the RYA base the syllabus and the course duration based on students with no prior knowledge. Unfortunately most courses are populated by students who are repeating the course for the Nth time because they have to and hence are basically bored by the whole thing.
Much better would be a revision course for these people. As a first timer you will learn a lot and have the confidence to act when you have to. There are good instructors and some who are not so good just reading off the script and showing videos. Try to get recommendations about courses run in your area.
I understand that the RYA base the syllabus and the course duration based on students with no prior knowledge. Unfortunately most courses are populated by students who are repeating the course for the Nth time because they have to and hence are basically bored by the whole thing.
Much better would be a revision course for these people. As a first timer you will learn a lot and have the confidence to act when you have to. There are good instructors and some who are not so good just reading off the script and showing videos. Try to get recommendations about courses run in your area.
There are very, very few medically qualified people who are good at teaching or performing first aid! They have a totally different skill set best used when the causality arrives at A&E.Ah, I hope the tutor on the course is medically qualified, might check on that.
There are very, very few medically qualified people who are good at teaching or performing first aid! They have a totally different skill set best used when the causality arrives at A&E.
There are a few, e.g. Dr David Hillebrandt (see link below), who have studied the dark art and are both brilliant at lecturing and being a GP, but I recommend you find a good paramedic/lifeboat crew member who understands the particular environment we might need to practice the dark art in.
https://www.thebmc.co.uk/ismm-world-congress-mountain-medicine-bolzano-report
The appendix test is when you push on it doesn't hurt when you release the pressure it does.
That's one of the tests but it also works for an ovarian cyst, unusual in males though!
On a separate note I saw in a recent Isle Of Wight News, they're getting de-fibrilators useable by the public at a few points around the Island.
Well there are ambulances screaming to and fro quite a few times, every day, but no hospital of any kind nearby for miles; people are even inconsiderate enough to have accidents or become ill at weekends !
Giving out defribulators seems like the idea of the ultimate cynical NHS accountant, or maybe a way to sort out delinquent vandals ?
" Take it off the ' stun ' setting for this one ! "
Note that advice re CPR seems to change annually so one needs to keep updated.
That is the real item that always amazes me. We did this at school 40 years ago & it seems the medical profession still does not know how to do it & changes its mind every 15 years
Recently they published that bacon was bad for you - when any drunk knows that the morning after a bacon sarnie is about as good as it gets
My grandad had bacon & eggs for breakfast for 70 years ( could not afford it for the first 20) & died at 90
If only I could tell him it was the bacon that done it & not the car that clipped him at the bus stop
As for the RYA course - I did it & i have forgotten just about everything, except that I did go & buy some triangular bandages ---& put a roll of shrink wrap in the kit to cover burns ( advice I got, not from the RYA but from the pharmacist when i ordered the bandages[/QUOTE
It was the bacon sarnie the driver was concentrating on wot got 'im, thus adding to the statistics !
As one of those bored people redoing. I think you will often find this is the case. I usually take my course from St Johns Ambulance. it's an Occupational basic standard intended for any generic work place. We usually ask for add on for marine and for kids and infants. There is usually a mix of first time, those who have not done a course for donkeys and regular repeaters.
The instructors are good, its what they do, they instruct right up to paramedic level.
A mix of participants is good. some times you can learn a lot from other participants.
I have done through the sailing school I worked at. its pretty much the same about half first timers and half instructors who were renewing. The instructor was good, and enthusiastic.
I will say again. Any first Aid course is worth doing and repeating.
It appears the RYA will accept most First Aid Course which meet the standard.
This death on my boat was preventable. If we had an AED.