PJ will judge international competition
The World Rescue Challenge is an international firefighters competition.
PHILLIP Jacobus ‘PJ’ Reid, firefighter, has been appointed as a judge for the 2018 World Rescue Challenge to be held in Cape Town from October 21 to 26.
He is a crew commander for Ekurhuleni Disaster and Emergency Management Services (DEMS), based at Leon Ferreira Fire Station in Boksburg. The World Rescue Challenge is an international firefighters competition.
PJ will be one of five South Africans who will join 21 other assessors from all over the world for the rescue challenge.
The World Rescue Challenge is a premier global rescue event and is hosted by different countries each year. It is hosted by the World Rescue Organisation. The 2018 edition will be co-hosted in conjunction with the South African Medical Rescue Organisation (SAMRO).
The teams from across the world compete in extricating a patient from a wreck of a vehicle at a staged accident scene. The teams will be assessed on three safety categories: incident commanding, technical rescue (using of tools to take out a patient) and on the medical technique they use.
They will also be assessed on professionalism, speed and care. The categories include general approach to the scene, survey of the scene, casualty care and assessment, and communication among the team and the patient and the assessors. All these have to be done within a specified time-limit.
PJ stressed although the main aim in a emergency is to extract the patient from danger, safety for involved emergency personnel is also key. He said being selected as an assessor is the highlight of his career spanning 26 years.
He said these kind of competitions are good for training and having a readily deployable team of emergency personnel.
“My shift is already benefiting from it as we are currently doing training on how to extricate a patient from a motor vehicle accident safely and on time,” PJ said.
He added mastering communication at the scene is one of the key things in emergency situations.
“Sometimes you get to a vehicle accident scene and find there is no one trapped but there is a person still sitting in the wrecked car. We constantly train our crew to know how to talk the patient out of such situations,” he said.
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