The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) is proud to
partner with local emergency care experts for Stop the Bleed Day on
March 31, 2018. The day is part of Stop the Bleed, an ongoing
national campaign initiated by a federal working group convened by
the National Security Council staff and the White House. The
campaign’s goal is to equip the general public with the tools and
knowledge to become immediate responders and help stop
life-threatening bleeding. On Stop the Bleed Day, many of the 16,000
registered instructors will participate in a grassroots effort by
leading free courses across the country.
“Taking immediate action to prevent a friend, loved one or stranger
from losing blood during an emergency can save that person’s life,”
said Paul Kivela, MD, MBA, FACEP, president of ACEP. “Stop the Bleed
Day is part of an important initiative that empowers bystanders with
a few basic techniques to stop or slow life-threatening bleeding and
offer critical support until trained medical help arrives.”
In addition to free courses in select locations nationwide, the
campaign encourages the widespread availability of bleeding control
kits in easily accessible public locations such as businesses,
schools, airports and other public buildings. Kits can contain items
such as gauze, tourniquets and other wound treatment items.
Stop the Bleed training will teach people to identify nearby tools
that can be used to control bleeding, correctly apply a tourniquet
to an injured limb, keep a victim calm and other techniques.
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Participants will learn that after ensuring their own safety, anyone
can start the “ABCs of Bleeding Injuries:”
Alert. Get help by calling 911 yourself or telling somebody
to call 911.
Bleeding. Find the bleeding injury. Open or remove clothing
over the wound to see it clearly. Look for and identify
“life-threatening” bleeding.
Compress. Apply pressure to stop the bleeding by:
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Covering the wound with a clean cloth and applying pressure by
pushing directly on it with both hands, OR;
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Using a tourniquet, OR;
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Packing (stuffing) the wound with gauze or a clean cloth and
then applying pressure with both hands.
Stop the Bleed was
launched in October 2015 after the Sandy Hook mass shooting as a
national preparedness initiative to teach the general public some of
the life-saving techniques that members of the military and
emergency responders rely upon.
For more information visit
http://www.emergencycareforyou.org/stop-the-bleed-day/.
[American College of Emergency
Physicians] ACEP is the
national medical specialty society representing emergency medicine.
ACEP is committed to advancing emergency care through continuing
education, research and public education. Headquartered in Dallas,
Texas, ACEP has 53 chapters representing each state, as well as
Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia. A Government Services
Chapter represents emergency physicians employed by military
branches and other government agencies.
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