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Posted: May 31, 2022

T-CPR Training Program Meets TX Legislative T-CPR Course Requirements

RQI Partners LLC, the partnership between the American Heart Association® and Laerdal Medical, announced its suite of digital training and education programs designed for 9-1-1 dispatchers and telecommunicators, RQI® Telecommunicator CPR (RQI T-CPR), meets the state requirements for initial licensure training and continuing education compliance, set by the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement (TCOLE). 

A state agency charged with establishing minimum standards regarding competence and reliability in education, training and licensing for law enforcement, corrections and telecommunications professionals, TCOLE recognizes the RQI T-CPR program as meeting the learning objectives for TCOLE’s Cardiac Emergency Communication Course No. 786. The course results from Texas House Bill 786, which requires all 9-1-1 dispatchers and telecommunicators in the state to receive and complete training in telecommunicator CPR. The law went into effect September 2021.

Texas House Bill 786 requires that telecommunicator licensure and continuing education training and courses:

  • Use the most current nationally recognized emergency cardiovascular care guidelines.
  • Incorporate recognition protocols for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
  • Provide information on best practices for relaying compression-only CPR instructions to callers.

The RQI T-CPR program is based on the nationally recognized American Heart Association Guidelines for CPR and Emergency Cardiovascular Care, the official resuscitation guidelines used by all other training providers nationwide. The program is uniquely qualified to meet the requirements of this legislation and holds the distinction as the only T-CPR program that has been vetted by Association scientists and educators.

“The statistics on out-of-hospital cardiac arrest occurrences and survival bring great urgency to optimizing every link in the chain of survival and preparing providers to deliver peak, high-quality performance, beginning with 9-1-1 dispatchers and telecommunicators — the first first responders,” said Matt Zavadsky, chief transformation officer at MedStar Mobile Healthcare, which implemented RQI T-CPR last spring. “TCOLE’s recognition brings another level of validity to the efficacy of RQI T-CPR and how the program positions these professionals to convey CPR instructions effectively to help save more lives.”

More than 350,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests occur in the U.S. annually. About 90% of people who suffer out-of-hospital cardiac arrest die. CPR, especially if performed immediately, can double or triple a cardiac arrest victim’s chance of survival. Research shows that resuscitation knowledge and skills, including the ability to recognize and manage a cardiac arrest event, decay in one to six months following training, which may result in a delay, or failure, to initiate telecommunicator CPR.

Available in three tiers — Essentials, Challenger and Responder — RQI T-CPR is rooted in the Resuscitation Quality Improvement® (RQI) program, which is co-developed by the American Heart Association, the world’s leading voluntary organization dedicated to a world of longer, healthier lives for all, and Laerdal, one of the world leaders in medical simulation and resuscitation training.

Course content and the three learning levels can help public safety telecommunicators achieve mastery, verified competence and confidence — the hallmarks of the RQI program — in high-quality telephone CPR delivery and cardiac arrest recognition. Bringing increased effectiveness and efficiency to the learning experience, telecommunicators can enroll in entry, intermediate and advanced instruction, and upon course completion, will receive an American Heart Association T-CPR course certificate of completion or e-credential.

“We are excited our RQI T-CPR programs have

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Posted: May 31, 2022

GA Couple Restoring 1939 Fire Truck

Already known around town for Cherry, their pink poodle, Paul and Alice Williams now have another claim to fame: restoring a 1939 fire truck.

The apparatus was sitting in a pole barn for more than 10 years, reports 13wmaz.com, when the two found it. It’s a Houston County truck, a 1939 Dodge, original engine, 6-cylinder with 72,000 miles on it.

Residing at the corner of Pio Nono and Marlies Circle, the vintage rig popped up on Facebook Marketplace and the two decided to purchase it, the report says. The Williamses are in the process of restoring “Scarlett Belle,” but they have no plans to have it match Cherry.

Many first responders have stopped to look and take pictures with the apparatus, the report notes. The goal is to get the truck back on the road and eventually display it at car shows.

Learn more about Cherry, the octogenarian apparatus, and why the Williamses dye their dog pink every year.

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Posted: May 31, 2022

Help Sartell (MN) Fire Department Christen Tower 21

The Sartell Fire Department plans to put its new Tower 21 in service this weekend, and, to celebrate, the department is inviting the public for a ceremony on Sunday from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Attendees will be able to get a close-up look at the 100-foot ladder.

“We look forward to the community joining us for the celebration,” the department writes on Facebook. “The celebration ceremony will take place at 6 p.m. The public is invited to attend.”

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Posted: May 31, 2022

Two NY EMS Providers Hurt in Ambulance Crash

A Boro Park Hatzalah ambulance overturned in a busy New York City intersection Thursday after being hit by another vehicle.

The ambulance was on its way to an emergency call at the time of the crash at 14th Avenue and 39th Street.

Two Hatzalah volunteer EMS providers were inside the ambulance at the time of the collision, according to collive.com. The two were treated by Hatzalah and were said to be in stable condition.

No patient was onboard the ambulance.

The report did not say if anyone was ticketed or charged.

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Posted: May 31, 2022

Photo of the Day: May 31, 2022

Midwest Fire—Albion (ME) Fire Rescue pumper-tanker. Freightliner 114SD cab and chassis; Cummins X12 505-hp engine; Waterous CSU 1,500-gpm pump; APR polypropylene 3,000-gallon water tank; 30-gallon foam cell; Waterous Aquis 3.0 single-agent foam system; 3 Newton stainless steel electric dump valves; All-Poly™ tank and body construction. Dealer: Sarah Atchison, Midwest Fire, Luverne, MN.

MORE FIRE APPARATUS ARTICLES>>

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