Special to the Herald Times
RBC | In an emergency, bystanders can be a critical lifeline until professionals arrive, yet nearly half of U.S. adults are unprepared to help in a medical crisis, according to a recent survey from the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP). However, four in five adults (81%) said they would be willing to help in an emergency if they took a training course.
The American Red Cross and ACEP announced March 1, 2023, the release of a course called “Until Help Arrives.” The course is designed to educate and empower bystanders to take action and provide lifesaving care if they are first on the scene during an emergency.
The 90-minute online course covers five fundamental actions that can be taken during a life-threatening emergency that can help sustain or save a life until EMS arrives: hands-only CPR (no breaths), automated external defibrillator (AED) education, choking education, severe bleeding control, including use of a tourniquet, administering naloxone for an opioid overdose.
Training is strongly correlated to taking action. Nine in 10 adults trained in any form of emergency response skill (91 percent) are willing to take action in an emergency, according to the ACEP survey.
The course is available on redcross.org/UntilHelpArrives. Because it is online only, it does not meet OSHA requirements for First Aid/CPR/AED training with psychomotor skills practice.


