All our online courses are now CPD Certified and many of the classroom ones as well and we will be adding more shortly. More information to follow.
All our online courses are now CPD Certified and many of the classroom ones as well and we will be adding more shortly. More information to follow.
Do you have any medical or accident stories to share? We are looking for stories of how you cope with medical conditions or accidents and how you have adapted to injury to inspire and teach others. Also do you have any questions that we can feature on this blog and our other sites?
You can email to keith@protrainings.eu them, post to our Facebook or add to this blog. Any stories welcome on any subject would be ideal. We do not need to quote your name or details.
We have added adaptive testing to our courses so that you are asked quiz questions during the course and the final exam uses a pool of questions to ensure all exams are different. Passing the test is the goal but with our courses you can also view remedial help after to ensure that even the questions you got wrong, you can ensure that you know the answers. Added to this you still get access to the course for 8 months allowing you to keep up to date with the latest additions.
We will be launching a new course on Anaphylaxis soon aimed at people with Anaphylaxis and people or parents who care for someone with this condition. Have a look at our youtube site for more information on auto-injectors. To view one of the videos click the following What are auto-injectors video.
A woman from Tunbridge Wells in Kent who is blind and has epilepsy is getting help from a very special assistance dog. Visit the guide dogs for the blind website
Hetty, a black Labrador/Retriever cross is the first dog in the UK to be trained as both a guide dog and a seizure alert dog and has been officially handed over to her new owner, Toni Brown-Griffin.
Two-year-old Hetty had already been trained as a guide dog; she was then specially selected by Sheffield charity Support Dogs to learn how to identify the onset of an epileptic seizure. Hetty will now help Toni, who is registered blind, get out and about and manage her seizures.
Toni, 42, said: “Hetty is a phenomenal dog, I could never have imagined how good she could be. Not only does she help guide me but she is always on the watch out for signs of a seizure. If it is a minor seizure she will come to a halt and sit, but at an offset angle, not straight like she normally does. But, if it is a major event, she will warn me by putting her chin on my knee or pawing at me. This gives me time to get to a place of safety.”
Chief executive of Guide Dogs Richard Leaman said: “Dual dogs like Hetty transform the lives of people living with sight loss and other disabilities. This is a great example of two charities working together. We are confident that Hetty will help Toni live independently for many years to come and we look forward to doing more work with Support Dogs.”
Rita Howson, Support Dogs’ Director of Operations said: “We know Hetty is the first dog to deal with these two disabilities in the country, but we can find no mention of a similar dog anywhere else so we think she is totally unique and could be the first in the world. It is a remarkable testament to the growing relationship between Support Dogs and Guide Dogs.” Visit the guide dogs for the blind website
The British Heart Foundation is urging people to forget “mouth-to-mouth” and to concentrate on chest compressions when performing CPR. ”Hands-only CPR” has previously been supported by the Resuscitation Council (UK). But it is now being promoted in a new advertising campaign featuring footballer-turned-actor Vinnie Jones. New polling by the BHF suggests many feel worried about the idea of giving the “kiss of life”.
Watch the video click here This is nothing new in our training and the course is taught the same and full CPR training must still be trained, it is excellent advice to untrained people and as an alternative to full CPR to anyone. All our courses have always had chest only compression training videos.
The official position of the BHF is now that anyone who does not have CPR training should ignore the kiss of life in favour of hard and fast compressions in the centre of the chest. A new poll conducted across the UK and involving 2,000 respondents showed nearly half were put off from performing CPR because of a lack of knowledge.
A fifth worried specifically about the thought of the kiss of life or about contracting an infectious disease. Four in 10 people were worried about being sued if they did something wrong, even though the BHF argues no such case has ever succeeded in Britain. ”The kiss of life can often be daunting for untrained bystanders who want to help when someone has collapsed with a cardiac arrest,” said Ellen Mason, senior cardiac nurse at the BHF.
She said the kiss of life remained the “gold standard” of CPR, but added if a person had not had training the best option would be to just do chest compressions.
Bee Gees hit - The BHF is also suggesting people hum to the Bee Gees hit Stayin’ Alive, to get the tempo of chest compressions right, although others have in recent months questioned whether this is appropriate, suggesting it may lead to compressions which are too shallow. The new BHF advert features Vinnie Jones in his traditional hardman guise, administering chest compressions to a Bee Gees backbeat after being thrown an unconscious body by his henchmen.
Commenting on the new campaign, he said: “There really shouldn’t be any messing about when it comes to CPR. If you’re worried about the kiss of life just forget it and push hard and fast in the centre of the chest.
“Hands-only CPR should give have-a-go heroes the confidence to step in and help when somebody is in cardiac arrest.” Ms Mason said everyone should learn what to do: “Thirty thousand people have a cardiac arrest in the UK every single year and half of those are witnessed, but in most cases no-one acts, no-one knows what to do, people panic. ”If it was us, we would all want our loved ones and ourselves to be saved, wouldn’t we?”
More information http://www.bhf.org.uk/heart-health/life-saving-skills/hands-only-cpr.aspx
The treatment for inserting a Stent to treat heart conditions is in the news with Prince Philip. It is a simple and effective procedure with great success.
The procedure know as Coronary Angioplasty is a procedure to treat the fatty narrowing of the arteries to increase the blood flow to the heart. This fatty deposits, Plaque build up over time causing the arteries to harden and narrow reducing the amount of blood that may pass. This harding is called atherosclerosis and is a common disorder and can affect any artery in the body but when it affects the coronary arteries it is called Coronary Heart Disease (CHD).
The process of Angioplasty can help to restore the blood flow where the arteries have become narrowed through key hole surgery techniques. Medication is given to numb and relax the body. A thin plastic tube, catheter, is then passed through the groin or sometimes the arm, guided to the heart by the use of dye and x-ray techniques to the affected area of the heart. Doctors can see clearly the results to ensure the correct area is treated.
A stent is like a small cage tube that can be expanded to open the artery. When the catheter reaches the area to be treated, a stent is inserted and a balloon inflated to ensure the stent is exactly where required. The stent is left in place and then the catheter is removed. The process is done in 1-2 hours and in many cases the patient can return home the some day others are left in hospital to ensure a full recovery. There were over 80,000 procedures carried out in 2008 and estimated that there are over 100,000 procedures carried out in the UK every year now.
We have adapted all our Anaphylaxis courses to include the new Jext Auto Injector. This auto injector is not a “new version of the epi-pen” it is a different brand and has a lot of benefits over other auto injectors.
We have added a Anaphylaxis student manual to the course which is downloaded once you attend your ProTrainings course. The Jext is not available in all area’s yet but this is expanding rapidly across the country so both systems will be available next year and some retraining will be needed. On completion of the ProTrainings Anaphylaxis course you will receive a free student manual, login and other features as well as a ProTrainings wall certificate/wallet card.
For more information please email support@protrainings.eu or call 01223 911805
“Salt is good for us after all,” according to the Daily Express. The newspaper said that a “controversial new study suggests that salt in the diet can lessen our chances of suffering heart disease and strokes”.
The Express story itself should be taken with a large pinch of salt, as the study doesn’t suggest that eating high levels of salt is good for us. Instead, the research found that in white people with normal blood pressure, a low-salt diet only slightly reduced blood pressure but led to small increases in substances such as cholesterol.
Read the full report on the NHS website
A method of communicating with brain damaged patients who appear to be in a vegetative state has been discovered by scientists in the UK and Belgium. Writing in The Lancet medical journal they describe how they measured electrical activity in the brain to detect consciousness. The technique, known as EEG, is painless and involves attaching electrodes to the head.
Doctors hope it can be used as a diagnostic tool in homes and hospitals.
For the full details click here