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EMLRC's Mobile Simulation Lab Featured on North Florida's WJHG-TV (NBC7) May 13, 2009 article "Mobile Bus Helps First Responders Train."

ORLANDO, FL -- May 14, 2009 -- The Emergency Medicine Learning & Resource Center's Mobile Simulation Lab was featured on North Florida's WJHG-TV (NBC7)
May 13, 2009 article "Mobile Bus Helps First Responders Train."

The Mobile Simulation Lab is a 45-foot motor coach complete with a full ambulance bay and emergency department area to bring unlimited real life scenarios to first responders such as EMTs, paramedics, firefighters, emergency physicians, and nurses.

 


 

 
Mobile Bus Helps First Responders Train
 
Posted: 8:11 AM May 13, 2009
Last Updated: 8:11 AM May 13, 2009
Reporter:
Alex Denis

 

You've heard the expression, "there's no substitute for experience.”
That may be true, but Walton County paramedics received the closest thing to real-life emergency situations today as part of a special training exercise.
Newschannel 7's Alex Denis shows us some state-of the art equipment that recreates emergency situations.

This emergency crew can't figure out what's wrong with their patient.
That's okay, because their patient isn't real.
Meet the state's cutting-edge medical simulator dummie "Tommy."
Tommy responds just like a real patient.
He answers questions, coughs and wheezes.
His symptoms will either get better or worse, depending on the treatment he receives from the medical crew.

"When we would use our stethoscopes on the chest you could hear the breath sounds like you would on a real patient. It gives you more of the reaction that a real patient would do," says first responder Lt. Robert Daniel.
Instructors can control the simulator, programming-in different symptoms for unusual emergencies- like Anthrax inhalation and an H1N1 Flu outbreak.
They hope the realistic training will better prepare first responders for real-life emergencies.

"It improves their proficiency in recognizing some things they wouldn't normally run into such as Pandemic Flu, Anthrax, burn and blast injuries, cyanide poisoning," says first responder Capt. Steve White.
Tommy's bus travels all over the state helping first responders perfect their skills diagnosing unusual symptoms.

"Your fire rescue crews are going to be the ones that are called upon to answer that call. They need additional training and additional funding for that training to help keep the general public safe," says Clinical Programs Coordinator Eric Dotten.
Defuniak Springs and Walton County emergency agencies secured a state grant to bring the mobile simulation lab to Defuniak Springs for this week's training.
Paramedics and EMS feel these simulated training should be used more often.

"This is the training of the future, but it really needs to be the training of now because it's so realistic and that's the training that we need so when our crews encounter this, it's not the first time. It's a very practiced skill," says White.
The simulator training costs $3,500 a day.

Walton County personnel will training on the simulator in Defuniak Springs until Thursday, May 14, 2009.
 


The Emergency Medicine Learning & Resource Center (EMLRC) is a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting and advancing emergency medicine, disaster management, pre-hospital emergency care and public health through the provision of educational and research programs. The EMLRC provides lifesaving education for lifesavers.

For further information contact:
John Todaro, Director/Chief Operating Officer
Emergency Medicine Learning & Resource Center
3717 South Conway Road
Orlando, FL 32812-7607
Phone: 800-766-6335
Email: jtodaro@emlrc.org
Internet: www.emlrc.org

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