First aid drive for three-wheeler drivers to save lives
A pre-hospital care training programme that first got underway in
line with World First Aid Day will make thousands of three-wheeler
drivers throughout Sri Lanka proficient in first-aid procedures that
could help save lives and prevent disabilities, according to health
professionals.
Usually blamed for causing road accidents, the three-wheeler drivers
are being taught the basics of first aid, including managing bleeding,
burns and fractures, checking airways for obstructions and deciding when
to use the wheelbarrow lift or the fireman's lift.
"Three-wheeler drivers are usually the first to arrive at the scene
of a road accident," said Adrian Mutupulle of the Sri Lanka Red Cross
Society (SLRCS), pointing out that tuk-tuks are a popular and quick way
to get about. "We are training them to be first responders when they get
there."
The World Health Organization (WHO) and an NGO, Medical Teams
International, are funding the project, which is seen as a significant
step towards improving the first response system on the island. The
training, targeting 4,500 three-wheeler drivers, 1,300 traffic police
officers and about 1,000 civilians, was planned around World First Aid
Day on 13 September and is the first step in a continuing programme.
"Road accidents are one of the leading causes of death here," WHO's
National Consultant in charge of Non-Communicable Diseases Lanka
Dissanayake said.
"We want to assist the Health Ministry to train the first responders
to meet an emergency situation without causing any more trauma for the
victims."
Many accident victims are transported to hospital in three-wheelers
often increasing the risk of aggravating injuries. "Cervical and spinal
injuries are the main cause of permanent disability and can be made
worse during transportation," said Dissanayake. "With proper lifting
techniques, this can easily be avoided. Lives can also be saved by
keeping the airways of the injured person open. Even removing helmets
has to be done carefully."
At a training session organised by the SLRCS, first-aid instructor
Thilak Kumara asked drivers from Negombo how a broken leg could be
stabilised before the patient was carried.
Participants eagerly offered suggestions such as using a plank or a
broomstick. But Kumara showed them how to use the patient's uninjured
leg as a splint and demonstrated the correct way of binding the two
limbs together with bandages.
"I have taken patients in my vehicle before, but this is the first
time I saw how it should be done correctly," said Gerard Priyantha, one
of the participants.
Nishantha Silva, another driver, recounted how he had recently helped
a person who was knocked down by a motorcycle and taken him to hospital.
"His leg was bleeding profusely and I held it tightly hoping it would
stop." At the training session he learnt that he could have more
effectively staunched the bleeding by applying pressure farther up the
thigh.
Dissanayake said three-wheeler drivers could not be discouraged from
ferrying injured people to hospitals "because very often there is no
other alternative".
"This training should be given to more people, not only to
three-wheeler drivers," said W. Jayatilleke, who pointed out that when
he rushed an accident victim to hospital, he lost out on other hires and
it meant the loss of a day's work if he had to give evidence about the
accident later on.
He has felt the brunt of relatives' ire who sometimes blamed the taxi
drivers for making the patient's condition worse after a ride in the
cramped three-wheeler. "At least now we can confidently tell them that
we know something of how to care for accident victims."
The trainees were given certificates, a first aid kit, first-aid
brochures to distribute and a sticker saying, "I have been trained in
First Aid" to display on their vehicles.
The SLRCS hopes to have a refresher course to evaluate the trainees'
performance after six months, while the WHO is considering linking up
with other UN agencies to extend the programme to cover a larger target
group.
-IRIN
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