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Are You In Charge Of Safety Planning At A Non-Profit Organization? 3 Roles That Benefit From CPR Training

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People often think of CPR as something that nurses and doctors need to know. While this is true, the majority of workplaces benefit from having at least several members on their staff that know how to administer life saving procedures such as chest compressions. Your non-profit organization likely provides services to members of vulnerable populations such as pregnant women or veterans. Or your volunteers may perform work tasks that increase the risk of injury. Either way, consider sending any volunteer who performs these roles to CPR training to ensure that everyone knows what to do in an emergency.

Staff Involved With Sorting and Distributing Donated Items

Volunteers at non-profit organizations often work hard to sort through items that are heavy or unwieldy. For example, your team may need to move donated furniture from one place to another, or their role may involve climbing tall ladders to reach high storage shelves. While each member of the warehouse team should be trained on basic safety practices such as team lifting, it is possible that the exertion could tax a person's body to where they experience difficulty breathing. Alternatively, a fall from a high place could cause them to lose consciousness. During a CPR class, volunteers can learn how to quickly help their coworkers until professional emergency services arrive.

Volunteers Who Work With Infants or Pregnant Women

Some of your volunteers may work directly with infants or pregnant women who require special techniques to be used when administering first aid. For instance, a volunteer at a pregnancy aid center or who provides free child care to parents going to training classes benefit from taking a CPR certification class that gives them confidence that they can help in any situation.

Members of a Shelter or Food Service Team

At a shelter or food service charity, your front desk and intake team frequently deals with members of the population that come in from the street with a variety of health issues occurring. Since your crew never knows when someone may seek shelter due to a health crisis, it is important for them to know what to do in an emergency. From knowing how to help someone choking on their food during a charitable meal to stabilizing a homeless veteran who stops breathing overnight, CPR and first aid courses help your crew do even more to protect people from harm.

Your volunteers dedicate their time to helping others improve their lives. Now, you can help them save people's lives by giving them the training they need to take care of the people who visit and work in your non-profit during an emergency. 


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