Advanced HAZMAT life support

Advanced Hazmat Life Support (AHLS) has been the international leader since 1999, training interdisciplinary healthcare professionals to care for patients exposed to hazardous materials and dangerous goods. Since 1999, the AHLS team, including over 1,200 AHLS Instructors, has trained over 17,600 paramedics, physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and other healthcare professionals from 68 countries to face the clinical challenges of caring for patients exposed to threats, including Hazardous materials, dangerous goods , Chemical spills, Toxic releases, biological agents ,Radiological sources, Nuclear incident, Toxic terrorism.

AHLS courses are intended for:

Continuing education credits are provided by The University of Arizona College of Medicine,[1] Continuing Education Coordinating Board for EMS, and The University of Arizona College of Pharmacy via ACPE, and physicians receive credit via the American College of Emergency Physicians.

AHLS Provider Course

The Advanced Hazmat Life Support (AHLS) Provider program is a 16-hour, two-day course that teaches healthcare professionals to medically manage patients exposed to hazardous materials, including chemical, biological and radiological incidents. After the AHLS Provider course, participants will be able to:

  1. Rapidly assess hazmat patients
  2. Recognize toxic syndromes (toxidromes)
  3. Discuss the medical management of hazmat patients
  4. Apply the Poisoning Treatment Paradigm™
  5. Identify and recognize appropriate administration of specific antidotes

Those who complete the course and receive 80% or higher on the final exam will become a verified AHLS Provider for a period of four years. At the end of those four years, an online re-verification exam is required, if within six months of expiration. Those with expired verification for longer than six months must attend a live course to become re-verified.

Become an AHLS Provider

Each AHLS Provider Course is taught by a board-certified toxicologist, physician, and other AHLS Instructors. These expert instructors train healthcare professionals to become AHLS Providers and care for victims of hazmat incidents and toxic terrorism.

Small-group, interactive, tabletop exercises are included in all the AHLS Courses.

The AHLS Provider Course begins with a multiple choice pre-test to assess participants’ current knowledge and serves as a excellent study resource for the multiple choice post-test. Healthcare professionals who achieve at least 80% on their post-test are verified as AHLS Providers for four years.

The AHLS Instructor Course concludes with a multiple choice exam. Healthcare professionals who achieve at least 80% on this post-test become AHLS Instructors.

More details on AHLS Provider Course and its Continual Education Credit can be found on the following link:https://www.ahls.org/site/provider-course/

AHLS Instructor Course

The AHLS Instructor program is a four-hour course, preparing you to teach AHLS in your area. Often, this course follows the two-day AHLS Provider Course.

Qualified participants become verified AHLS Providers and/or Instructor for a period of four years upon successful completion of the course. Re-verification can be done by taking an exam online to become re-verified for an additional four years.

AHLS Instructor Course covers:

Find more details on AHLS Instructor Course and its Continuing Education Credit on: https://www.ahls.org/site/take-a-course/instructor-course/

Other courses

Please see https://www.ahls.org/site/take-a-course/ for more details on upcoming courses.

Host a course

AHLS can be offered in any city around the world. Any AHLS Verified Instructor (there currently are over 1,200) is able to apply and host a course. If you do not have a Verified AHLS Instructor in your community, you can become an Instructor by taking the Provider/Instructor course offered in another community.

Call AHLS Headquarters at (520) 626-2305 / 626-1982 or contact your AHLS Regional Director to obtain a list of AHLS Verified Instructors who can assist you in offering the course.

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.