“Stop the Bleed” turns bystanders — even young children — into immediate responders by teaching them to pack a wound and use a tourniquet.
“Chances are, you’re never ever going to have to use this. If you do, it’s gonna be scary,” Kate Carleton told the 20 or so 8- and 9-year-olds. “But because we’ve taught you what to do, it makes it a little less scary.”
She spent the next 30 minutes teaching them how to stop a wound from bleeding out.
...
Although a child dying at school in a mass shooting may be unlikely, a child dying from a gunshot is not. Firearms are the leading cause of death among people 18 and younger in the US, accounting for nearly 19% of all childhood deaths.
THIS is what we need! I FULLY support teaching Kindergarteners how to dress wounds so that Mentally Insane Criminals can continue using guns (because ANY sort of Regulation is UNCONSTITUTIONAL!)
I am never opposed to any sort of survival, triage, or emergency training. Wounds, broken bones, severe weather... things that should be taught in schools. Do you want the next generation to be better? Teach them about the consequences of our freedoms and how to deal with them.
Seriously though - I am doubtful we could meet these requirements to add an amendment stating the sky is observably blue in the current state of things in the US. It's hard for me to imagine we'll ever pass an amendment for any purpose ever again unless things change quite a lot.
A proposed amendment must pass a two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress, or if two-thirds of the states petition Congress, a new constitutional convention can be called to consider amendments. In any event, three-fourths of the state legislatures must ratify the amendment for it to become a permanent part of the Constitution.
This is an odd characterization of the Stop the Bleed program. Largely I've seen it targeted at adult and people in industries at particular risk, rather than children in particular.
That said I could get behind a CPR/AED/StB program being standardized for a high school course level. These types of programs tend to take a little amount of time to teach and can buy enough time for EMS to arrive. Although 8-9 yr olds seems like a bit young.
Honestly high school feels a bit too long to wait; middle school seems to be the age that gets a lot of weird and stupid, but surprisingly bad injuries.
Training for 5 year olds should be mostly about thinking about not putting themselves in danger, recognizing when somebody needs help, and getting help.
As for high school age you can get certified as an EMT at 16, so high school age can handle this type of class.
I am all for basic first aid to be part of school curriculum. CPR, AED, and Stop the Bleed.
There are so many reasons to have a stop the bleed kit and training that isn't gun shot related. Industrial accidents, automobile accidents, and even accidents around the home like kitchen accidents could cause a serious bleed. It's not a terrible thing to understand the basics of preventing someone from bleeding out.
I mean......if history repeats itself, we better buckle up. We've been in a bad recession for a bit, but not a great depression.
So, hold onto your butts, because the 30s we won't even have alcohol. And a silly mustache model will decide to commit mass genocide in an attempt to take over the world.
Although they do say "History never repeats itself, but it does often rhyme".
Do maybe this time it'll be a silly beard style instead.
As with bulletproof backpacks and multiple security doors in schools... another thing that shouldn't exist in the first place, and it's only necessary because dead kids aren't enough for Americans to reconsider how convenient it is to kill people here.