Camaraderie and EMS skills for area volunteers

LAKEVILLE — Tri-state first responders spent Saturday, March 16, getting additional training in rescue skills at a daylong symposium at The Hotchkiss School sponsored by the EMS Institute at Sharon Hospital.More than 150 first responders from 23 ambulance squads and fire departments in Connecticut and New York state were able to take part in 15 different sessions.One session was titled, “Please don’t call me honey: Understanding our geriatric patients.” Another session was called, “Suicide prevention skills for emergency responders and other helpers.” There was also a session called, “Calm in the storm: self-care for first responders.”The EMS Institute is a nonprofit organization that provides certification, education and training for medical first responders.David Cadwell, director of the EMS Institute, noted that the first responders in this part of the world are all volunteers who “drop everything to show up for these ambulance calls. For the privilege of doing that they need to have continuing medical education. This is what we are providing today.”In addition to training, he said, “there is a lot of camaraderie and reconnecting with old friends. We could not be happier that The Hotchkiss School opens their doors to us. That is very, very generous of them to let us use this place while they are on spring break.”The keynote speech was given by Raphael Barishansky, director of Emergency Medical Services for the Connecticut Department of Public Health.Kitty Hickcox of Norfolk, president of the EMS Institute at Sharon Hospital Board of Directors, said the organization was able to keep the cost of the day-long educational experience to $50 per person, but noted that “many of these folks have to pay the fee out of their own pockets.”Hickcox is an advanced emergency medical services instructor who holds a master’s degree in education. Her day job is teaching science at the Indian Mountain School in Lakeville.In addition to training emergency medical personnel, the EMS Institute provides medical training for regular community members in skills such as CPR.For more information about the EMS Institute go to www.emsinstitute.org.

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