Skip to main content

Course for First Responders on How to Provide Trauma Care

During his recent radio programme “Mann Ki Baat,” Narendra Modi, The Prime Minister of India, expressed concern regarding the road safety situation on Indian roads and the number of lives being lost as a result of traffic accidents. Modi said, “The statistics on road accidents in our country are shocking. There is an accident every minute. And due to road accidents there is a death every four minutes." He further noted that lives can be saved by taking the injured to hospital within the first hour, also kno
September 15, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
India’s roads face difficult challenges in reducing the casualty rate, with vulnerable road users at particular risk
Delivering trauma care programme benefits safety for vulnerable road users

During his recent radio programme “Mann Ki Baat,” Narendra Modi, The Prime Minister of India, expressed concern regarding the road safety situation on Indian roads and the number of lives being lost as a result of traffic accidents. Modi said, “The statistics on road accidents in our country are shocking. There is an accident every minute. And due to road accidents there is a death every four minutes." He further noted that lives can be saved by taking the injured to hospital within the first hour, also known as the Golden Hour, of any crash. According to Indian Government officials, more than 50% of road traffic accident fatalities can be prevented by providing adequate care during this Golden Hour.

In response to Modi’s call to improve road safety in India, the International Road Federation, Geneva has taken up the challenge of providing trauma care to road traffic accidents in India. As part of this initiative, IRF Geneva, together with Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), has developed a course for first responders to accidents, to enable them to provide appropriate trauma care to accident victims.

The course for first responders is focused on enabling them to provide the appropriate trauma care to victims of traffic accidents. This course will provide participants with both the theory and practice of providing trauma care. It includes modules on how to assess the initial condition of the victim; how to ensure the safe transfer of the crash victim to a hospital or clinic where emergency care can be provided; and how to use Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) techniques.

The course is initially being targeted at police personnel, truck drivers, drivers of public transport vehicles, drivers of company or government owned vehicles, volunteers, and schoolchildren. The IRF is hopeful that as the course gets underway and increasing numbers of people are trained in providing trauma care to accident victims, it will help to reduce the numbers of fatalities from road accidents in India.

For more information on this course, please contact: %$Linker: 2 Email <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkEmail [email protected] email: [email protected] false mailto:[email protected] true false%>. Or visit the 1201 IRF Geneva website.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • IRF Launches New Website for World Road Statistics
    April 6, 2017
    The International Road Federation Geneva Programme Centre (IRF Geneva) has been publishing the IRF World Road Statistics (WRS), the most complete and authoritative source of data for the international road, traffic and inland transport sectors for over 50 years. For 2017, IRF Geneva is pleased to announce the launch of a new website (www.worldroadstatistics.org) dedicated to the World Road Statistics. This new website provides all the information about the WRS including the methodology; contents of sections
  • Road accident data management
    July 19, 2012
    IRF Geneva unveils a modern solution for road accident data management. This year's Intertraffic Amsterdam exhibition provided a high-profile backdrop for the launch of RADaR, a pioneering new tablet application developed to facilitate the on-site collection of precise and scientific accident data, primarily by traffic police. Introducing the application to an international audience gathered in the venue’s inaugural Smart Mobility Centre, IRF Geneva's director general, Sibylle Rupprecht, highlighted RADaR's
  • Improving conspicuity and safety for India’s cyclists
    March 13, 2014
    IRF’s India Chapter launches major drive to promote the conspicuity of cyclists Road accident deaths in India are among the highest in the world. Cyclists constitute a particularly vulnerable category of road users with more than 6,800 estimated to have lost their lives on the country’s roads in 2011 alone. A large proportion of the fatalities can be attributed to nothing more than the fact that cyclists are not always sufficiently conspicuous to other road users. To address this tragic state of aff
  • Next IRF World Meeting to be held in New Delhi from 14-17 November 2017
    June 30, 2014
    The General Assembly and the Board of Directors of IRF at their annual Statutory Meeting held in Paris on 16th April 2014 have firmed up the venue and dates of the next IRF World Meeting. This major event will be held in New Delhi, the capital of India from 14-17 November 2017 Held every four years for the last 60 years, the World Meeting is a highly regarded and must-attend event.