Saturday, March 30, 2019

Alpha Epsilon Delta – UA’s Newest Immediate Responders!

You can find the original version of this content Alpha Epsilon Delta – UA’s Newest Immediate Responders! at this site: ICSAVE.org website

The University of Arizona now has 42 more trained and certified immediate responders among their ranks! On Friday, March 29th, these exceptional young men and women from Alpha Epsilon Delta completed the necessary educational requirements to obtain American College of Surgeon’s Bleeding Control Certification. Civilians need basic training in Bleeding Control principles so they can provide immediate, frontline aid until first responders can take over care of an injured person. Due to many situations, there may be a delay between the time of injury and the time a first responder is on the scene. Without civilian intervention in these circumstances, preventable deaths may occur. Although no single set of skills or response can fit all injury, trauma, or active violence situations, making sure everyone knows his or her options and can react decisively will save valuable time and lives. As members of our extended community family, these exceptional young healthcare pre-professionals now have the knowledge, skills, and abilities to help save a life!

Thursday, March 28, 2019

Coyote Trail Elementary School Ready to Save a Life!

The initial publication of Coyote Trail Elementary School Ready to Save a Life! was done on: www.ICSAVE.org

We want to recognize the 45 Marana Unified School District educators who joined us Thursday, March 28th to talk about the vitally important subjects of school safety and community resilience! Pima County is blessed to have exceptional professionals who dedicate their lives to ensuring our children receive a top-notch education, and do so in a safe and secure learning environment. Each day these men and women educate and protect our county’s 150,000 children and do so with distinction! Integrated Community Solutions to Active Violence Events (ICSAVE) led the discussion, and also provided the participants with lifesaving Bleeding Control Training. Civilians need basic training in Bleeding Control principles so they can provide immediate, frontline aid until first responders can take over care of an injured person. Due to many situations, there may be a delay between the time of injury and the time a first responder is on the scene. Without civilian intervention in these circumstances, preventable deaths may occur. Although no single set of skills or response can fit all injury, trauma, or active violence situations, making sure everyone knows his or her options and can react decisively will save valuable time and lives. As members of our extended community family, these exceptional men and women now have the knowledge, skills, and abilities to help save a life! All of us at ICSAVE send out a special thank you to the Coyote Trail Elementary School's staff for assisting us with this vitally important event. From our family to yours, thank you for your service! [embed]https://youtu.be/rVPmGl2jar8[/embed]  

Amphi School District Professionals Our Newest Community Lifesavers!

You will find the initial version of this document Amphi School District Professionals Our Newest Community Lifesavers! on this site: ICSAVE.org

Pima County residents now have 40 more trained and certified immediate responders among their ranks! On Wednesday, March 28th, these dedicated Amphitheater Unified School District administrators and educators completed the necessary educational requirements to obtain American College of Surgeon’s Bleeding Control Certification. Civilians need basic training in Bleeding Control principles so they can provide immediate, frontline aid until first responders can take over care of an injured person. Due to many situations, there may be a delay between the time of injury and the time a first responder is on the scene. Without civilian intervention in these circumstances, preventable deaths may occur. Although no single set of skills or response can fit all injury, trauma, or active violence situations, making sure everyone knows his or her options and can react decisively will save valuable time and lives. As members of our extended community family, these exceptional men and women now have the knowledge, skills, and abilities to help save a life! [embed]https://youtu.be/TLeSu4j5BZE[/embed]

Sunday, March 24, 2019

Congregation Anshei Israel Ready to Protect the Flock!

The following piece of writing: Congregation Anshei Israel Ready to Protect the Flock! was first found on ICSAVE.org

Since 1999, there have been over 1850 deadly force incidents take place throughout our faith-based communities. On Sunday, March 24th, 40 members of Congregation Anshei Israel received the knowledge, skills and abilities to better survive an active shooter event. Conducted by Integrated Community Solutions to Active Violence Events (ICSAVE), and the Arizona Church Security Network, ALICE (Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter, Evacuate) is a set of proactive, options-based strategies, that increase synagogue members’ chances of survival and bridge the gap between the time a violent event begins and law enforcement arrives. These participants learned and experienced the decisive advantages of proactive vs. passive response strategies via numerous live scenario drills and are now empowered to help save lives! [embed]https://youtu.be/XYqPnEPRNgw[/embed]

Saturday, March 23, 2019

Maricopa County Public Health Stop the Bleed Training Event

The first publication of Maricopa County Public Health Stop the Bleed Training Event was carried out on: http://www.icsave.org

Uncontrolled bleeding from any cause can result in death in as little as five or ten minutes. Learn basic techniques to control bleeding using hands, dressings and tourniquets.

DATE: April 17th, 2019 TIME: 12:00 – 2:00pm LOCATION: Maricopa County Public Health 4141 North Central Avenue, Suite 1400 Phoenix, AZ 85012 CONTACT: Pete Benzing pete.benzing@icsave.org

The course is free of charge but registration is required.

Sponsored by Integrated Community Solutions to Active Violence Events (ICSAVE)

Tucson Community Chaplains Corps Active Killer Response Training

The original publication of Tucson Community Chaplains Corps Active Killer Response Training was carried out on: www.ICSAVE.org

Conducted By: Integrated Community Solutions to Active Violence Events (ICSAVE), and the Arizona Church Security Network (ACSN)

Hosted By: Tucson Community Chaplains Corps

Since 1999, there have been over 1850 deadly force incidents take place throughout our faith-based communities.

ALICE (Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter, Evacuate) is a set of proactive, options-based strategies, that increase your chances of survival during a violent intruder or Active Shooter event.

This course is designed to teach school, church, hospital and workplace administrators and employees skills and strategies that bridge the gap between the time a violent event begins and law enforcement arrives.

WHEN: 6/8/2019 from 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM WHERE: Calvary Tucson Church - West Campus 5170 South Julian Drive Tucson, AZ 85706

NOTE: Registration is limited to the first 50 students

CONTACT: Mike Carter

chaplainpmcarter@gmail.com

Background: You will become knowledgeable in statistics and information about active shooter situations and why ALICE training is effective. • ALICE Concepts: We will deliver a detailed overview of ALICE training and the liability of proactive vs. passive response strategies. • Physical Drills: You will experience live scenario drills that compare passive vs. active responses. • Effective Training: You will learn the strategies and be provided with materials to become an effective member in your own organization.

Tucson Community Chaplains Corps Stop the Bleed Training Event

You can look at the first version of this information Tucson Community Chaplains Corps Stop the Bleed Training Event at this website: http://www.icsave.org

Uncontrolled bleeding from any cause can result in death in as little as five or ten minutes. Learn basic techniques to control bleeding using hands, dressings and tourniquets.

DATE: June 8th, 2019 TIME: 8:00 – 10:00am LOCATION: Calvary Tucson Church - West Campus 5170 South Julian Drive Tucson, AZ 85706 CONTACT: Mike Carter chaplainpmcarter@gmail.com

The course is free of charge but registration is required.

Sponsored by Integrated Community Solutions to Active Violence Events (ICSAVE) and the Arizona Church Security Network

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Sonoran Science Academy Students Training to Save Lives!

The original publication of Sonoran Science Academy Students Training to Save Lives! was done on: icsave.org

On Wednesday, March 13th, 27 Sonoran Science Academy students were trained by the Arizona Stop the Bleed Coalition. These exceptional young women and men completed the necessary educational requirements to obtain American College of Surgeon’s Bleeding Control Certification. Civilians need basic training in Bleeding Control principles so they can provide immediate, frontline aid until first responders can take over care of an injured person. Due to many situations, there may be a delay between the time of injury and the time a first responder is on the scene. Without civilian intervention in these circumstances, preventable deaths may occur. Although no single set of skills or response can fit all injury, trauma, or active violence situations, making sure everyone knows his or her options and can react decisively will save valuable time and lives. As members of our extended community family, these empowered citizens now have the knowledge, skills, and abilities to help save a life!

Marana Educators Our Newest Immediate Responders!

You can see the first version of this information Marana Educators Our Newest Immediate Responders! right here: http://www.icsave.org

We want to recognize the Marana Unified School District educators who joined us Tuesday, March 12th to talk about the vitally important subjects of school safety and community resilience! Pima County is blessed to have exceptional professionals who dedicate their lives to ensuring our children receive a top-notch education, and do so in a safe and secure learning environment. Each day these men and women educate and protect our county’s 150,000 children and do so with distinction! Integrated Community Solutions to Active Violence Events (ICSAVE) led the discussion, and also provided the participants with lifesaving Bleeding Control and Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) Training. Civilians need basic training in Bleeding Control and CPR principles so they can provide immediate, frontline aid until first responders can take over care of an injured or ill person. Due to many situations, there may be a delay between the time of injury or illness, and the time a first responder is on the scene. Without civilian intervention in these circumstances, preventable deaths may occur. Although no single set of skills or response can fit all illness, injury, trauma, or active violence situations, making sure everyone knows his or her options and can react decisively will save valuable time and lives. As members of our extended community family, these exceptional men and women now have the knowledge, skills, and abilities to help save a life! All of us at ICSAVE send out a special thank you to the Marana Unified School District staff for assisting us with this vitally important event. From our family to yours, thank you for your service!  

Sunday, March 10, 2019

Pima County TECC Course Synopsis

The initial publication of Pima County TECC Course Synopsis was carried out on: http://www.icsave.org

March 7th thru the 10th, the Pascua Yaqui Fire Department hosted a National Association of Emergency Medical Technician (NAEMT) Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (TECC) Course. Sponsored by Integrated Community Solutions to Active Violence Events (ICSAVE), the course brought together over 58 active public safety and allied healthcare professionals from throughout Pima and Santa Cruz Counties. The 16-hour course covered topics designed to decrease preventable death in tactical situations. Topics included: Hemorrhage control; surgical airway control and needle decompression; strategies for treating wounded responders in threatening environments; caring for pediatric patients; and techniques for dragging and carrying victims to safety. Developed by NAEMT’s Prehospital Trauma Life Support (PHTLS) Committee, the TECC program is based on the guidelines from the Committee on Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (Co-TECC) and the Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) program. TECC uses lessons learned from our military and applies them to the civilian world of tactical medicine. Thank you to all that attended! [embed]https://youtu.be/3RXFtWqnRTQ[/embed]

Pima JTED Law Enforcement Bleeding Control Course

This content: Pima JTED Law Enforcement Bleeding Control Course was initially seen on icsave.org

Pima County residents now have 17 more trained and certified immediate responders among their ranks! On Saturday, March 9th, these exceptional young men and women from Pima JTED’s Law Enforcement Program completed the necessary educational requirements to obtain American College of Surgeon’s Bleeding Control Certification. Civilians need basic training in Bleeding Control principles so they can provide immediate, frontline aid until first responders can take over care of an injured person. Due to many situations, there may be a delay between the time of injury and the time a first responder is on the scene. Without civilian intervention in these circumstances, preventable deaths may occur. Although no single set of skills or response can fit all injury, trauma, or active violence situations, making sure everyone knows his or her options and can react decisively will save valuable time and lives. As members of our extended community family, these young professionals now have the knowledge, skills, and abilities to help save a life! [embed]https://youtu.be/G79uszFhpB8[/embed]

Friday, March 8, 2019

Lake Havasu High School Active Shooter Response Training

This short article: Lake Havasu High School Active Shooter Response Training was first found on ICSAVE.org

Since 2013, there have been over 424 school shootings in America - an average of nearly one per week. On Thursday, March 7th, 182 teachers, administrators and support personnel from Lake Havasu High School, as well as public safety professionals and other community members received the knowledge, skills and abilities to better survive an active shooter event. Conducted by Integrated Community Solutions to Active Violence Events (ICSAVE), ALICE (Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter, Evacuate) is a set of proactive, options-based strategies, that increase chances of survival and bridge the gap between the time a violent event begins, and law enforcement arrives. School participants learned and experienced the decisive advantages of proactive vs. passive response strategies via numerous live scenario drills and are now empowered to help save lives! [embed]https://youtu.be/25LW2p6L__Y[/embed]

Western Arizona Law Enforcement Recruits Our Newest Community Lifesavers!

This write-up: Western Arizona Law Enforcement Recruits Our Newest Community Lifesavers! was initially seen on ICSAVE.org Mohave County r...