1-day emergency response training equips 3-K Antique students

By Annabel Consuelo Petinglay

February 15, 2024, 2:38 pm

<p><strong>TRAINING.</strong> University of Antique (UA) Dr. Pablo Crespo, Jr. observes maritime students administer the hands-only cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training at the university field on Valentine’s Day (Feb. 14, 2024). Antique Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Officer Broderick Train said in an interview Thursday (Feb. 15) that the trained students would now be their first responders during emergencies. (<em>PNA photo by Annabel Consuelo J. Petinglay)</em></p>

TRAINING. University of Antique (UA) Dr. Pablo Crespo, Jr. observes maritime students administer the hands-only cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training at the university field on Valentine’s Day (Feb. 14, 2024). Antique Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Officer Broderick Train said in an interview Thursday (Feb. 15) that the trained students would now be their first responders during emergencies. (PNA photo by Annabel Consuelo J. Petinglay)

SAN JOSE DE BUENAVISTA, Antique – A one-day training on hands-only cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) equipped 3,000 students at the University of Antique (UA) with response capability in times of emergency.

UA collaborated with the Department of Health-Center for Health Development Western Visayas (DOH-CHD WV) for the training on Wednesday.

“Trained students would now be our first responders to emergencies,” said Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Officer Broderick Train in an interview Thursday.

He added that students manifested their love for humanity by bearing with the intense heat of the sun to learn the CPR technique.

DOH Antique provincial director Rommel Garganera, who supervised the one-day training, said UA made a significant accomplishment by training 3,000 students in just one day.

Before Antique, the province of Negros Occidental registered the highest number of individuals who trained in CPR, with 2,600 trainees, but on a cumulative basis in 2019.

In his message during the training,UA Dr. Pablo Crespo said they held the initiative aligned with their new vision to become a premier university in transforming lives and developing sustainable and resilient communities.

“There are still 22,000 more students needed to be trained on CPR and other techniques on emergency response,” he said. (PNA)

 

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