π AED Challenge Participants!
A huge thank you to the community members who have already joined the challenge and shared photos of their AED locations.
Now it's your turn!
π Workplace
π Church
π School
π Gym
π Community Center
Can you find the nearest AED?
Post your photo below and help raise awareness during CPR & AED Awareness Month.
Rescue Ready CPR & First Aid
Certified CPR/BLS Instructor providing group and individual training.
Serving individuals, agencies, and organizations.
π 910-574-3536
π§ [email protected]
06/15/2026
π¨ AED Challenge Accepted! π¨
A huge thank you to everyone participating in the AED Challenge during CPR & AED Awareness Month!
Knowing where an AED is located could save valuable time during a cardiac emergency. These participants took a few moments to locate their AED and help raise awareness in their workplace and community.
π Do you know where the nearest AED is located?
Take a photo with your AED and join the challenge!
π¨ AED CHALLENGE π¨
Do you know where the nearest AED is?
Most people know what an AED (Automated External Defibrillator) does.
Far fewer know where to find one during an emergency.
This week, Rescue Ready CPR & First Aid is challenging our community to locate the nearest AED in your:
π’ Workplace
βͺ Church
π« School
πͺ Gym
π Community Center
πΈ Find it.
πΈ Take a photo.
π± Share it on social media.
π· Tag Rescue Ready CPR & First Aid.
#οΈβ£ Use
By participating, you're helping raise awareness and encouraging others to become familiar with lifesaving equipment in their communities.
Remember:
The best time to find an AED is before an emergency happens.
π 910-574-3536
π rescue-ready-cpr.vercel.app
πΈ Instagram:
π΅ TikTok:
Be Prepared. Stay Ready. Save Lives.
π¨ EMERGENCY AWARENESS MONDAY
"Why is 911 asking so many questions? Just send help!"
It's one of the most common reactions during an emergency.
The Myth:
Many people believe dispatchers are delaying help by asking questions.
The Reality:
911 dispatchers are gathering critical information that helps emergency responders prepare before they arrive. In many cases, emergency units are already being dispatched while those questions are being asked.
Why Those Questions Matter:
β Is the person conscious? β Helps determine the level of emergency.
β Is the person breathing normally? β Helps identify life-threatening conditions.
β Is there severe bleeding? β Helps responders prepare the appropriate equipment.
β Is the scene safe? β Protects both victims and responders.
β What is the exact location? β Helps ensure help arrives where it's needed.
The Psychological Barrier:
Fear and panic can make questions feel frustrating. Some callers think they're wasting time when every answer is actually helping responders prepare.
What Most People Don't Know:
Many dispatchers can provide life-saving instructions before responders arrive.
They may guide callers through:
β CPR
β Bleeding control
β Recovery position
β Other emergency care instructions
What NOT To Do:
β Hang up
β Argue with the dispatcher
β Guess when you don't know
β Leave the victim to search for information
Today's Action Step:
If you ever call 911, stay on the line and answer every question as calmly and accurately as possible.
Confidence Script:
"The dispatcher is my teammate, not my obstacle."
π 910-574-3536
π rescue-ready-cpr.vercel.app
Be Prepared. Stay Ready. Save Lives.
π©Έ TRAINING THURSDAY
The biggest tourniquet myth?
Many people believe tourniquets are dangerous and should only be used as a last resort.
The reality?
For severe, life-threatening bleeding, a tourniquet can be a life-saving tool when used correctly.
The psychological barrier:
People hesitate because they're afraid they'll hurt someone.
They think:
β "What if I do it wrong?"
β "What if I make it worse?"
β "Maybe I should wait for EMS."
The problem?
Severe bleeding can't wait.
Signs of life-threatening bleeding:
π©Έ Blood that won't stop
π©Έ Blood pooling on the ground
π©Έ Clothing soaked with blood
π©Έ Blood spurting from a wound
Training Scenario:
A worker suffers a serious injury on a job site. Coworkers apply pressure, but the bleeding continues. Someone trained in bleeding control recognizes the emergency, calls 911, and applies a tourniquet while help is on the way.
That action can make a critical difference.
Today's Action Step:
Know where bleeding control supplies are located at your workplace, church, or community organization.
While Waiting for EMS:
β Keep the person calm
β Monitor for signs of shock
β Do not remove the tourniquet
β Relay information to EMS when they arrive
Confidence Script:
"I may not be a medical professional, but I can take action while help is on the way."
Rescue Ready Training Includes:
β Stop The Bleed
β CPR & AED
β First Aid
β Emergency Response Training
π 910-574-3536
π rescue-ready-cpr.vercel.app
Be Prepared. Stay Ready. Save Lives.
π’ WORKPLACE WEDNESDAY
Most people think a stroke causes sudden collapse, severe pain, or a dramatic fall.
The reality?
Stroke symptoms can appear quietlyβsometimes while someone is sitting at their desk, in a meeting, or walking to the break room.
A stroke happens every 40 seconds in the U.S.
And in workplace settings, the average delay from symptom onset to calling 911 is over 3 hours β often because coworkers mistake symptoms for fatigue, stress, or βjust having a bad day.β
The most dangerous misconception:
Many people assume a stroke always involves pain.
In reality, some strokes cause little to no pain at all. Instead, you may notice sudden confusion, trouble speaking, facial drooping, or weakness on one side of the body.
That's why we remember:
π F.A.S.T.
π Face Drooping β Ask them to smile. Does one side droop?
πͺ Arm Weakness β Can they raise both arms evenly?
π£ Speech Difficulty β Is speech slurred, confused, or difficult to understand?
β° Time to Call 911 β If you notice ANY of these signs, call immediately.
The psychological barrier nobody talks about:
People hesitate because they don't want to embarrass someone or βoverreact.β
But in an emergency, being wrong means you checked on a coworker.
Being right could save their life.
Real example from a workplace:
A manager noticed her assistant kept tilting her head to one side and slurred one word during a morning meeting. She almost said, βAre you tired?β Instead, she ran through FAST. Face drooping? Yes. She called 911 immediately. That assistant survived with minimal disability because someone acted fast.
Today's Workplace Action Step:
If you notice a sudden change in someone's speech, face, or arm strength, don't wait for symptoms to βpass.β
While waiting for EMS:
Note the time symptoms started (paramedics will ask)
Keep the person comfortable and seated
Do NOT give food, drink, or medication
Do NOT let them βsleep it offβ
Confidence Script (say this to yourself today):
βI'm not a doctor. But I can recognize when something isn't right. And I will call 911.β
Rescue Ready Workplace Training includes:
β Stroke & cardiac emergency recognition
β CPR & AED for offices, warehouses, and job sites
β Stop the Bleed
β Emergency response protocols for teams
π 910-574-3536
π rescue-ready-cpr.vercel.app
Be Prepared. Stay Ready. Save Lives.
Most people expect choking to be loud...
π Real choking emergencies are often silent.
No speech.
No effective cough.
No call for help.
Recognition matters.
06/01/2026
π MINDSET MONDAY
One of the most dangerous signs during choking is silence.
Many people expect a choking emergency to look dramatic:
β Loud coughing
β Waving arms
β Calling for help
But when a person's airway becomes severely blocked, they may not be able to make any sound at all.
Warning signs can include:
β Inability to speak
β Inability to cough
β Difficulty breathing
β Clutching the throat
β Visible panic or distress
Because choking can happen so quickly, recognizing the signs is just as important as knowing what to do.
π Today's Preparedness Takeaway:
If someone can no longer speak, cough, or breathe normally, treat it as an emergency and act immediately.
Preparedness starts with awareness.
π 910-574-3536
π rescue-ready-cpr.vercel.app
Be Prepared. Stay Ready. Save Lives.
05/27/2026
π’ WORKPLACE WEDNESDAY π
Most AEDs are designed to TALK you through every step.
Many people hesitate to use an AED because theyβre afraid of:
β doing something wrong
β accidentally hurting someone
β shocking someone unnecessarily
But hereβs what many people donβt realize:
AEDs are built to guide ordinary people during extraordinary moments.
Modern AEDs:
β give voice instructions
β analyze the heart rhythm automatically
β will NOT deliver a shock unless itβs needed
That means the device helps guide the response while emergency services are on the way.
In cardiac arrest emergencies, early CPR and early defibrillation can make a major difference.
Preparedness isnβt about being fearless.
Itβs about becoming familiar enough to ACT when moments matter most.
π CPR & AED
π First Aid
π Stop The Bleed
π Workplace Safety & Team Training
π 910-574-3536
π rescue-ready-cpr.vercel.app
Be Prepared. Stay Ready. Save Lives.
05/21/2026
π TRAINING THURSDAY
One of the most dangerous sounds during cardiac arrest isnβt silence.
Itβs agonal gasping.
Agonal gasps can sound like:
β snoring
β choking
β irregular gasping
β struggling breaths
Many people mistake these sounds for βnormal breathingβ and hesitate to begin CPR.
But hereβs what most people donβt realize:
Agonal gasping is NOT effective breathing.
Itβs a brainstem reflex that can happen during cardiac arrest.
That hesitation matters.
Every minute without CPR can reduce survival chances significantly.
The psychological challenge:
Most people donβt freeze because they donβt care.
They freeze because theyβre afraid of being wrong.
βWhat if theyβre still breathing?β
βWhat if I make things worse?β
That fear delays action.
Thatβs why real hands-on training matters.
At Rescue Ready CPR & First Aid, we donβt just teach steps β
we train recognition, confidence, teamwork, and response under pressure.
Because emergencies donβt always look the way people expect.
π Todayβs Training Takeaway:
If someone is unresponsive and their breathing is NOT normal and regular β
treat it seriously and begin emergency response immediately.
Training includes:
β CPR & AED
β Stop The Bleed
β First Aid
β Emergency Preparedness
β Real-World Response Scenarios
β Workplace & Team Training
Preparedness starts long before the emergency.
π 910-574-3536
π rescue-ready-cpr.vercel.app
Be Prepared. Stay Ready. Save Lives.
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