Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Basic Info On BLS Certification

By Ericka Marsh


When health care workers are off work, they are often called upon to act as Good Samaritans if an emergency takes place in public. For these persons and first responders, or the people that are credentialed to deal with medical problems when they encounter an accident and are first on a scene, this is an educational requirement. Having a BLS certification can be helpful for any person with or without a medical background, and doesn't take long to acquire.

The above acronym means basic life support. So when it is used in the right manner, it can help prevent someone from dying and to help with any effort to save a life. The American Heart Association or AHA started to offer this so people would know more about how to help when there is an emergency, and so that health care workers can stay up to date on credentials. Some professions that use these skills may include your babysitter, a daycare worker and even security guards that work with the general public and their safety.

When you take this course, you should expect to cover many aspects of first aid. Included are strokes, seizures, heart attacks, and learning to clean and take care of a vast array of different wounds. With the training provided, you can also take part in CPR with AED on people of any age.

The CPR and AED or automated external defibrillator training will cover a one person and a two person team situation, showing a person how to breathe for another person. Using the AED to assist in life saving efforts is much more common today where this apparatus is available, and can mean the difference between life and death in some situations. Therefore knowing how to properly use one is essential in conjunction with CPR.

There is a written test, and it covers protecting yourself from infection with the use of universal precautions as well as bacteria, bloodborne pathogens and parasites. Using the proper personal protective equipment in a medical situation includes barriers, guards, gloves and goggles. Every one of these are found on the exams offered by the AHA.

Many different providers offer this certificate, and it's a requirement for professionals that offer it be certified to be allowed to do so. Your local AHA can partner with schools, companies, individuals and institutes to allow someone to confer this certificate to a student when they pass. Make sure that your provider can show this, so that your completion is legal.

Costs are not regulated or set for these courses, but are based on the person or location offering it. Your fees can cover the CPR dummy you will use, the AED being used, barriers and books or materials as well as paying for the practitioner's time to offer the class. You should ask before you enroll about how long the course takes and the fees associated.

Your certification could help you get hired at numerous types of jobs, but can be beneficial in your personal life too. Any person that deals with toddlers, the aging population or the public could make use of the information. There may come a time when it is you that is called on to save someone's life.




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