The EFR
training is a pre-requisite for the PADI Rescue Diver Course. The EFR
is also an essential p
rogram
to be completely familiar with. This is why Mermaids Dive Career
Development
Center Pattaya, Thailand
offer not just the EFR but the EFRI (Instructor rating) to all
Divemaster
and OWSI internship divers as standard. This is not a bonus course but
offered
with all DM and scuba diving instructor internships as standard
including the
instructor manual. Mermaids regard the EFRI as an essential program and
do not
charge for this.
When looking
for dive jobs you will wish to have the best possible credentials
behind you. By
being able to teach the PADI EFRI program to your dive students you
instantly
become more employable. Your dive employer will expect you to have this
credential as standard in many cases.
Emergency
First Response Primary Care
(CPR) Course Content:
Emergency First
Response Primary Care (CPR) teaches participants how to
respond to life-threatening emergencies. The
course focuses on primary care through a combination of
knowledge development, skill development and realistic scenario
practice to make
sure participants have the confidence in their ability to provide care
when
emergency situations arise. Primary Care (CPR) skills taught in this
course:
- Scene Safety
Assessment Universal Precautions - Communicable Disease Protection,
including barrier use Primary Assessment Rescue Breathing
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) Conscious and Unconscious
Obstructed Airway Management. Serious Bleeding Management, Shock
Management and Spinal Injury Management.
- Recommended Skills.
- Automated External
Defibrillator (AED) training.
- Emergency Oxygen Use
Orientation. (DAN O2 Oxygen First Aid for Diving Injuries is offered as
standard in the DM and diving instructor internships also).
Emergency First Response Secondary
Care (First Aid) Course Content:
Emergency
First Response Secondary Care
(first aid) covers injuries or illnesses that are not immediately life
threatening. Participants focus on secondary assessment and first aid
through
knowledge development, skill development and realistic scenario
practice.
Secondary Skills taught in this course:
- Injury Assessment
- Illness Assessment
- Bandaging
- Splinting for Dislocations and Fractures
Includes Reference Section on the
following topics:
Allergic
Reactions, Bruises, Burns, Chemical
Burns, CPR (adult, child, infant) Choking (adult and infant), Cone
Shell Stings,
Coral, Jellyfish and Hydroid Stings, Cuts, Dental Injuries, Diabetic
Problems,
Dislocations and Fractures, Electrical Injuries, Eye Injuries, First
Aid Kit
Assembly, Fish Spine Injury, Frostbite, Heat Exhaustion, Heatstroke,
Heart
Attack, Hypothermia, Illness Assessment, Injury Assessment, Insect
Stings,
Octopus Bites, and Poisoning.
Emergency
First Response Care for Children
Course
The
Emergency First Response Care for Children course is an innovative CPR,
AED and
First Aid training course that teaches participants how to provide
emergency
care for injured or ill children (ages one to eight) and infants less
than one
year old. Participants learn about the types of medical emergencies
that
children face, and how they differ from adult conditions. The
curriculum also
includes the importance of attending to basic emergency situations with
children, the emotional aspects of caring for children, secondary care
for
children, and preventing common injuries and illnesses in children.
Emergency First Response Care for Children course trains the lay
rescuer to
follow the same priorities of care used by medical professionals. The
student
masters the priorities and the procedures of patient care for infants
and
children in a non-stressful learning environment, which reduces the
performance
anxieties that interfere with learning and enhances confidence when
rendering
aid in a real medical emergency.
The course includes both primary care (CPR) and secondary care (first
aid)
skills. The primary care portion of the course prepares the rescuer to
render
aid to an infant or child with a life-threatening emergency such as
choking or
cardiac arrest. Secondary care focuses on developing secondary patient
care
skills and building the rescuer's confidence to render first aid to an
infant or
child in need when emergency medical services are either delayed or
unavailable.
The Care for Children course content is based on guidelines from the
Pediatric
Working Group of ILCOR.
Care for Children Primary Care Course
Content:
Scene Safety
Assessment Universal Precautions-Communicable Disease
Protection & Barrier Use Primary Assessment Obstructed Airway
Management
(child and infant) Rescue Breathing (child and infant) Cardiopulmonary
Resuscitation (child and infant) Automated External Defibrillator (AED)
use
Serious Bleeding Shock Management Spinal Injury Management.
Care for Children Secondary Care
Course Content:
- Injury Assessment
- Bandaging
- Illness Assessment
Emergency
First Response Instructor Course:
During the Emergency
First Response Instructor course, you will build on
your skill as an Emergency Responder and focus on developing your
instructional
abilities to teach these skills to others. The Instructor course
provides you
with the additional training necessary to teach the Emergency First
Response
Primary Care (CPR), Secondary Care (First Aid) and Care for Children
courses.
(Region-specific courses including First Aid at Work Asia Pacific and
First Aid
at Work Great Britain require additional training.) Through a
multi-media
approach of independent study, classroom sessions and practical
teaching
assignments, you learn to conduct Emergency First Response courses.
The instructor course
covers specific goals and performance requirements
for the Primary Care, Secondary Care and Care for Children courses,
along with
instruction on how to structure learning, the requirements of
performance-based
training, and your role as the instructor in the learning environment.
You also
learn how to motivate students, evaluate student knowledge, present
course
content effectively, become proficient in developing students' hands-on
skills
practice sessions, and are taught how to present an effective
scenario-based
learning experience.
Prerequisites:
To enter the
Emergency First Response Instructor course, you must be 18
years old and have completed adult, child and infant CPR and first aid
training
in the past 24 months or a be a practicing medical professional such as
a
physician, Emergency Medical Technician, Paramedic and Registered
Nurse.
Making
the
best of your resources:
I
know divers that have turned the PADI EFRI program into a business in
it's own
right. To have skills in CPR and basic life support is a superb thing
whether a
diver or not. A wise instructor teaches his friends to be trained in
this area:)
- Hotel staff, swimming pool staff, some restaurants and staff in many
other
areas require training - there are a lot of contracts out there...
For
more information please email us at:
info@scuba-trip.co.uk