Posts Tagged ‘mn’


CPR, First Aid training, OSHA MN

Monday, June 14th, 2010

What are you looking for in an instructor?  What about the quality of the training or the qualifications of the trainers?  Let us know!  Write back in the comment section and we’ll help you.

Have you looked at our site pages?  There is a multitude of informational posts that we’ve put here.  If you are looking for the qualifications for instructors please check out our personal page. 

CPR and first aid training for OSHA should be informational, fun, definitely with no stress on the student and practical for the students’ particular use!  We make sure that when we are training industrial, business or commercial agencies that we gear the training toward what they will be possibly experiencing within their workplace.  Taking care to give quality education and NO war stories!

Try our training, you won’t be disappointed!  We’ve gained popularity with our electrical contractors and line workers because of background and understanding of their particular situations.  Ask a line worker for Donovan or Mill and they’ll tell you  they’ve gotten expert instruction in what to do for their particular emergencies! 

Instructors with diverse background in industry, factory settings and EMS are the instructors we have! 

Sign up for training now!

Call 763-477-5766 and speak with Shannon, do you have questions?  We’ll answer them!  We are here to help you.

March newsletter

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

REGISTER FOR OUR APRIL 11TH FIRST RESPONDER CLASS!  Call or e-mail classes@americancprandsafety.com FOR MORE INFORMATION 

Our CPR classes for March and April are on the site now.  Register now by clicking the class schedule button on top and then pick you class, click the red button to schedule your appointment and come on in!! 

Spring is upon us…(Yippee).  We’ll all be making our summer plans and getting ready for our boating, hiking and camping trips.  Are you prepared for an emergency?  If not, take our life safety class of Basic First Aid and CPR.  You’ll be glad you did!

DID YOU KNOW?

  • A woman’s heart beats faster than a man’s.
  • Your heart is about the size of your fist and the average adult heart weighs about 10 ounces (280 grams).
  • Your heart beats 100,000 times and pumps about 1900 gallons (7200 liters) of blood every day.
  • Three years after a person quits smoking, their chance of having a heart attack is the same as someone who has never smoked.
  • The right lung is larger than the left because of the placement of the heart.
  • The human heart can create enough pressure to squirt blood up to 30 feet.

Want more?????  Join a life safety class now! CLICK ON CLASS SCHEDULE BUTTON , CHECK OUT OUR CLASSES , and come join us!!!

Until next month….Stay safe and happy,

Shannon Madden

February Newsletter

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009



Hi folks,

Are your skills up to snuff?  Performing chest compressions takes strength and speed.  The rescuer needs to compress 1/2 the depth of the chest in order to profuse blood from the heart through the lungs and to the brain etc.  Are you compressing this depth on Annie?  Remember, anatomically, the heart lies in the center/left area of the chest.  If another rescuer arrives, they should feel a good pulse at the neck of the victim if you are compressing deep enough!  If they do, good for you! 

This is just one of the situations that a student taking CPR education will learn from our instructors.  It’s important to be a clear and knowledgeable instructor, we’ve been at cardiac arrest scenes, we’ve done the CPR, we’ve cried afterward with the family…we care.  This is why we train! 

At American CPR & Safety, Inc. our instructors are also refreshed with every new subject matter that arrives through American Heart and the American Medical Association. 

Fire officials are spreading the word on the dangers of burn injuries. Burn Awareness Week, observed the first full week in February, is designed to provide an opportunity for burn, fire and life safety educators to unite in sharing a common burn awareness and prevention message in our communities.  It’s a good thing too, because nationwide, an estimated 40,000 people and 10,000 kids suffer severe burn injuries – 4,000 of which die, according to the American Burn Association.* How prepared are you to protect the people in your organization if a severe burn situation were to happen?  

On another note!

Questions have risen regarding our Good Samaritan Law, which should cover our good hearted citizens that arrive first on a scene to render first aid and/or CPR to another citizen.  Read on…….. 

From Division 2.5 of the California Health and Safety Code: 1799.102. No person who in good faith, and not for compensation, renders emergency care at the scene of an emergency shall be liable for any civil damages resulting from any act or omission. The scene of an emergency shall not include emergency departments and other places where medical care is usually offered.According to the ruling, the existence of the word “medical” in the last sentence, and the statute’s location near other sections regarding emergency medical services means that only medical care is covered by the law.  Why is that important? Because of the court’s decision that moving a victim to a safer location is not medical care. From the decision, written by Justice H. Walter Croskey: “There may be circumstances in which moving someone from their current location is a matter of medical exigency, such as where a carbon monoxide poisoning victim needs to be moved to a source of fresh air. We do not hold that the act of moving a person is never the rendition of emergency medical care, only that it was not in this case.”

The problem with this thinking is that untrained rescuers – the very population this law is intended to protect – are supposed to make a determination as to whether the care they are rendering is medical in nature in order to benefit from Good Samaritan protection.

This subject will be creating havok in the first aid class, where, the instructor is educating students on how to stabilize the victims head.  Should we be doing this act then??  This is NOT giving medical care, it’s stabilization!  What if the victim is face down in a puddle of mud and cannot breath?  Will we be back 20 years or so, saying….”don’t move him/her you might break the neck!”  I’m not sure how you might be feeling right now, I’m preturbed by this.  We(americans) just can’t seem to move forward from our “babe in the woods” mentality.  Take a trip to France, Germany or most of europe and you won’t be hearing a court case like this one!

I would like to know if EMS personel had rendered care to this person, that she wouldn’t end up like this anyway?  AND..would there be a law suit then, or would it be written that she suffered her paralysis from the accident alone?  HUM.  Just a thought.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this, I’m sure many others would too!  Tag, you’re it!  Comments!

Stay safe and happy, and may our Heart month mean those of you who are smoking will quit and become healthier!

Shannon Madden

Check out Minnesota’s Law..

http://law.justia.com/minnesota/codes/595/604a-s01.html