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STOP THE BLEED® + AASHTO
Stop The Bleed Coalition
The Stop The Bleed Coalition provided a custom webinar to the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Safety Committee (AASHTO) about how STOP THE BLEED® fits into the Safe System Approach. AASHTO is a standards setting body which publishes specifications, test protocols, and guidelines that are used in highway design and construction throughout the United States. Life-threatening bleeding emergencies can often happen using many of the United States’s transportation systems, whether that’s driving on a state highway or riding on a train.
The Stop The Bleed Coalition webinar included information about the Coalition’s resources, licensing program, and an overview of what’s coming next for STOP THE BLEED®. This was conducted as a part of the larger Webinar Program that the Coalition introduced this year.
If your organization is interested in having a Stop The Bleed Coalition webinar customized to your organization’s audience, send an email
[email protected].
How STOP THE BLEED® training tries to help people save lives, especially in high-crime areas
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel |
July 26, 2024
The Sherman Park community is undertaking an initiative to reduce crime by implementing the Cardiff model, which uses data from police, fire and hospitals to target high-crime areas. This includes bringing STOP THE BLEED® classes to community members. At the Sherman Park training, people learned to apply pressure to a wound, pack a wound to control bleeding and apply a tourniquet to wounded limbs.
While Susan Cronn, a Medical College of Wisconsin nurse practitioner, teaches STOP THE BLEED® classes to the Sherman Park community, she is also on a mission to get lifesaving Stop the Bleed kits into people's hands.
She got a $40,000 grant through MCW’s Comprehensive Injury Center to buy 500 kits, train people on their use and place them in neighborhoods with high incidences of gun violence.
Read the full story ([link removed])
Louisville 18-year-old recovers after being shot in the head, his surgeon encourages public to get STOP THE BLEED® trained
WLKY | August 2, 2024
On average, in Kentucky, more than 800 people die a year from gunshots, and that includes suicides. Dr. Amy Gonshak, a UofL Health psychologist, says after people are shot, every aspect of their life is impacted and that the journey to recovery can be both physical and mental.
Da'Sean Pandy, who is 18, survived being shot in the head. In February 2023, he says he was getting off of the bus.
"And two minutes later, a car is flying down the street, shooting," he said.
For five months after the shooting, he had to use a wheelchair and could not walk. He now continues his physical therapy with UofL Health, slowly regaining his mobility.
He's come a long way, even getting to walk across the stage at his graduation from Breckinridge High School this past spring. He says he remains positive every day. "It could've been worse," he said.
UofL is the only level-one trauma center in the region, where critically injured patients are treated in an area of the hospital called room 9.
The response is fast, and all of the resources of the hospital are available.
"We call it the golden hour," he said. "It's an extremely critical period of time after someone's injured, and they can be golden minutes, quite frankly, after a gunshot wound because you can bleed out for major vessels in seconds."
That's one of the reasons Miller encourages people to take stop the bleed classes, so anyone can help someone if they've been shot.
He says stopping someone from bleeding can be life or death.
UofL offers Stop the Bleed ([link removed]) classes. The next one is on Sept. 25.
Read the full story ([link removed])
@rne_araucania
Instagram
We know how important it is for the citizen to know how to deal with a life-threatening situation, with simple language and clear tools, today more than ever knowledge becomes necessary, from a shooting, to a home accident, traffic accident, or maybe at your child's school, the It's important to be prepared.
Do you want to learn?. Contact us, by message
Our citizen corporation #RneAraucania Delivering tools to Save Lives
@klga_issa.lopez thanks for the video 👋
@uoflhealth
Instagram
The UofL Hospital Trauma team recently hosted a community @stopthebleedproject training at Republic Bank Foundation YMCA. Attendees learn techniques like applying pressure, packing a wound and using a tourniquet to stop life-threatening bleeding.
UofL Health does about 60 Stop the Bleed trainings per year, including private classes and quarterly events open to the community.
** Connect with the Stop the Bleed Coalition
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[email protected]
The Coalition is a community of individuals and organizations who are passionate about the STOP THE BLEED® campaign. The Coalition’s goal is to support the growth and impact of the campaign by providing access to information and services to the growing STOP THE BLEED® community as well as financial support to the STOP THE BLEED® Project.
STOP THE BLEED® is a national campaign to encourage bystanders to become trained, equipped, and empowered to help in a bleeding emergency before professional help arrives. It is a public/private partnership led by the Department of Defense and many other stakeholders, including the Stop the Bleed Coalition.
Copyright (C) 2024 Stop the Bleed Coalition. All rights reserved.
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Stop the Bleed Coalition
c/o Amp Your Good, Inc.
88 E Main Street
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Mendham, NJ 07945
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