Driver First Assist has launched Skills for Safer Journeys – a new online training course aimed giving drivers the skills to support at the scene of an on-road incident.
The 90-minute online course – which can be completed in stages – teaches drivers how to make critical decisions using the principals of dynamic risk assessment, safely park at the scene of an incident, gather crucial information for the emergency services, make the perfect 999 call, and provide first-aid assistance prior to the arrival of paramedics.
Driver First Assist CEO, David Higginbottom, said: “Last year there were 1,633 fatalities from road collisions in Great Britain – the equivalent of more than three ‘superjumbos’ falling out of the sky.
“In too many cases, the victims didn’t die because of the collision; they died as the first people on scene didn’t know what to do.
“We want to help employers meet their health and safety obligations by giving drivers the skills they need to be safer on the road.
“Health and safety law does not end at the factory, office or warehouse gate; when someone drives for work the roads become an extension of the workplace, even if they are driving a personal vehicle for business purposes.”
Supporting the launch, Sir Keith Porter, emeritus professor of traumatology at Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, explained: “We know many patients die at the scene of road traffic collisions because of a failure to open an airway, or to arrest external haemorrhage.
“The Driver First Assist course will empower drivers to deliver life-saving skills, helping to keep a patient alive in those valuable minutes before the ambulance arrives.
“This course also gives drivers the confidence to ensure they fully appreciate the importance of scene safety and good communication with the emergency services. The more first responders we have, the better. Could that be you?”
A World Health Organization report on road traffic injury prevention found that within high-income countries, 50% of deaths from road traffic crashes occur within minutes of the incident occurring.
It pointed out those who are present or who arrive first at the scene of a crash can play an important role in contacting the emergency services, securing the scene to prevent further incidents, and applying first aid.
It found many deaths from airway obstruction or external haemorrhage could have been avoided by lay bystanders trained in first aid.
Death from a blocked airway typically occurs in about four minutes, whilst NHS England’s target time for an ambulance to arrive if the call is life threatening is eight minutes.
The course costs £47.50 (ex-VAT) per driver for lifetime access, with discounts for bulk purchases.
Paul Loughlin, partner and motoring and transport specialist at national law firm Stephensons, said: “Skills for Safer Journeys is an invaluable tool which enhances driver safety and contributes significantly to any fleet operations’ safety regime.
“It helps bridge the compliance gap so often found between the ‘on-road’ and ‘off-road’ workforce.”
Higginbottom concluded: “Drivers injured or falling ill on the road should not experience worse outcomes than their non-mobile counterparts. Our vision is to turn hundreds of thousands of drivers on UK roads into qualified first responders.”
Over the past 10 years, Driver First Assist has been delivering face-to-face first aid training to more than 10,000 HGV drivers as part of their Driver Certificate of Professional Competence (CPC) periodic training requirements.
Since 2017, Driver First Assist has also been responsible for training all National Highways traffic officers in lifesaving first aid.
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