Sunday, December 30, 2012

Nebraska Society of Fire Service Instructors Winter Conference

February 8-10, 2012.
The 2013 Les Lukert Winter Conference will be presented by the Nebraska Society of Fire Service Instructors. It will be held again in Kearney, NE. This conference has grown to be an excellent training opportunity, and draws instructors and students from a very wide area. I personally cannot speak too highly of this great event.

Conference Brochure and registration

There are classroom and hands on training opportunities. Here are just some of the topics that will be presented.
Fireground Strategies: Preparing for the Hard Environment
Establishing Your Organizational Philosophy
Tactical and Strategic Perspectives of Residential Fires
Intervention or Prevention: Do your runs come with a round trip ticket
Tactical Perspectives of Ventilation
Floods and Moving Water, Awareness Level Training and Hazard Identification
 
Check out the brochure and see some of the top instructors that are presenting.
 
I look forward to seeing you there.
 
 


 

Friday, December 28, 2012

Interesting Training Opportunity

“Fire Engineering University is changing the way fire service professionals approach continuing education. Our goal is to provide you with relevant, topical educational content that is easily accessible.”
 I think this is an interesting training approach in this time of limited budgets. For those of us trying to stay current on the issues surrounding the fire and emergency services, this could prove to be a valuable resource. Anytime we can find current useful information I think we should take advantage of it and share it with everyone else out there.  I would rather have the face to face interaction of the classroom; however it just isn’t always possible these days it seems. I am adapting my learning to take advantage of the online webinars, articles etc. This whole “interweb” thing looks like it isn’t going away, so I suppose we should all look for ways to embrace it.
I also know that there is a lot of bogus information being put on the internet, since anyone with a website or blog is an "expert" these days. And yes, I have a blog....
What are your thoughts on this approach to continuing education? What other training are you finding useful on the internet? Please leave your responses in the comments.

Monday, December 24, 2012

Are You Kidding Me?

Monday, December 24, 2012 Numerous Firefighters have been shot in West Webster, New York (Monroe County, NY). Initial reports are that they were dispatched to a vehicle fire that was upgraded to a structure fire. Upon arrival, Firefighters were assaulted with several Firefighters shot and down. Radio reports indicate that they arrived and had a working fire and were assaulted. Multiple ambulances and ALS units were requested.Keep them in your prayers.
http://mcfw.com/  

Breaking News

6:00 AM – West Webster Firefighters are on scene of a house fire on Lake Rd. Firefighters were shot at while on location. There are injured firefighters. The Police are on scene and are attempting to get the scene secure. Please check back for further details.

I'm sitting in my living room this morning drinking coffee and enjoying the company of my wife and children, when I receive and email from the Secret List about the above shooting. It is a reminder that nothing we respond to is routine.
Prayers to the firefighters working that scene, and to those injured.

 

Sunday, December 16, 2012

A couple of quotes I came across today.

A big part of your life is a result of the choices you make. If you don’t like your life, then it is time to start making changes and better choices.

"the past is history, the future is mystery."

Thursday, December 13, 2012

U.S. Military Tries Injectable Foam For Bleeding Control

I thought this article was interesting. Considering the advances to emergency medicine made due to experiances during the Vietnam War, I wonder how many more will come as a result of decades of war in Iraq and Afganistan.


A new kind of injectable foam used to stabilize soldiers and control bleeding is showing promise in U.S. Military applications and the technology could make its way into the civilian population.
http://www.emsworld.com/news/10842315/us-military-tries-injectable-foam-for-bleeding-control


The U.S. military is hoping that a new kind of injectable foam could stabilize soldiers injured on the battlefield until they can be taken to a field hospital. If successful, the technology could make itsway into civilian use as well, continuing a long tradition of combatmedicine innovations being appropriated for the common good.
On Monday, Massachusetts-based Arsenal Medical Inc. announced thatit had received a new $15.5 million contract from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, bringing the project's total funding from DARPA up to $22.5 million.
The foam is designed to be injected by a medic into the injured patient through the navel. Inside the wounded person's abdominal cavity, the foam expands, molds around internal organs and compresses internal injuries that can't be seen.
"Currently, there are no effective pre-hospital treatments available for intra-abdominal bleeding on the battlefield," Massachusetts General Hospital surgeon David King said in a statement Monday. "Our ultimate goal is to find innovative ways to improve treatment and save lives of those who are serving their country, as well as those who experience serious injury through trauma."
Initial tests of the foam's performance in pigs, (http://www.arsenalmedical.com/sites/default/files/AAST_2012.pdf) presented by King and colleagues at the 2012 meeting of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma, are promising. In the experiments, pigs were wounded internally, simulating a liver injury, and injected either with Arsenal's foam or standard battlefield fluid resuscitation. After threehours, only 8 percent of the pigs on standard fluids survived; for those injected with foam, the figure was 72 percent.
Further clinical testing will need to be done to establish the foam's safety and efficacy. If successful, Arsenal hopes to continue developing the foam for civilian use. Emergency medical technicians could stabilize internally hemorrhaging trauma victims at the scene of anaccident before speeding them to the hospital.
One of the main challenges in designing a foam for internal use was to find a material that was not attracted to water. This design challenge was a big factor in the failure of other attempts at creating a foam like Arsenal's, according to the company's material science director, Upma Sharma.
"The problem is with these injuries, you're going in blind, with alarge pool of blood acting like a moat," Sharma (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-10/foam-seen-as-saving-lives-in-battle-with-civilians-next.html) told Bloomberg News . "Most materials never get to thesite of the bleeding."
Arsenal's foam, if it succeeds, would only be the latest piece of medical technology nurtured in the cradle of war. The first mass production of penicillin in the U.S. was undertaken in the 1940s, so the Allied soldiers could have the antibiotic on hand during the invasionof Normandy on D-day. Airlifting patients from the scene of injury by helicopter started in the Korean and Vietnam wars, and are now usedacross the country to speed injury patients from remote areas to central hospitals.
Military-funded advancements in prosthetics for soldier amputees are migrating into civilian use as well, with artificial limbs designed to mimic real ones almost exactly, or in some cases built for speed, as in the Cheetah limbs worn by Olympic sprinter Oscar Pistorius.

Are you looking for a place to say what you got to say?

I will make this blog available to my fire service brothers and sisters to share what ever they have to say. Of course it must be written so that our grandmothers can see it and not be embarrassed.

I will post your events, trainings, or whatever, as long as it is related to the fire service. I will even send out a twitter to let people know that something new is here.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Great Quote

"Individual commitment to a group effort, that is what makes a team work, a company work, a society work, a civilization work." Vince Lombardi

I believe the above quote applies to the fire service and to the fire instructor. What do you think?

Incident Commander?

I was having breakfast last weekend with an old friend from another fire department the other morning. We were meeting to work on a project for the Nebraska Society of Fire Service Instructors, and of course to catch up on what has been going on. As often happens at these breakfast meetings, the conversation went to training and how it relates to emergency operations.

He had just completed a class with a couple of other instructors teaching a class on Situational Awareness to a fairly large and diverse group of paid and volunteer firefighters that started with the classroom and the second day they went out and burned down a residential structure.

During this conversation, it occurred to me that I read a report on line of duty death, where task saturation of the incident commander was a contributing factor.  I wondered if more training on situational awareness would help avoid an incident commander suffering from task saturation. 

What do you think? Have you ever experienced task saturation, or a lack of situational awareness?  Give me your comments and lets see what kind of discussion we can get going.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Who I am.

I am a Firefighter by profession, Husband by choice, Father by the grace of God!