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The outdoor environment nearly always means that the casualty has to be looked after for a longer timescale than is typical in a more urban setting

What are the benefits of this course

Our Outdoor First Aid course provides the appropriate skills to manage an incident in a remote location, where emergency medical assistance could be many hours away. This course is ideal for people who have responsibility for taking groups of people on activity outings such as outdoor walks or bike rides, and in particular for members and leaders of activity and youth groups.

Key points of the Activity First Aid course:

  • Define their role as an emergency first aider, and how to communicate effectively when dealing with a casualty.
  • Describe how to minimise risks to themselves and others.
  • Identify first aid equipment and how to use it.
  • Describe how to conduct a scene survey, a casualty assessment and call for help.
  • Demonstrate how to administer Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitati on (CPR) using a mannequin doll.
  • Describe how to identi fy and treat a choking casualty with a par ally and completely blocked airway
  • Demonstrate how to control severe external bleeding
  • Describe signs, symptoms and how to treat any casualty suffering from meningi tis, poisoning, seizures and stroke.
  • Detail how to deal with fainti ng, bites, sti ngs, sprains, strains and other bone, muscle and joint injuries.

All course attendees will be provided with a Activity First Aid (2 days) certificate valid for 3 years

Contact us on 0333 016 4224 or E-mail us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for a course programme and course fees.

This HSE approved qualification came into effect on 1st October 2009, along with new guidance on assessing the needs of First Aid in your workplace.

Do your staff members need first aid training?

Your risk assessment of First Aid needs may well identify the need for Emergency First Aiders either as an addition to your First Aiders, or where the risk of your business is low, it may well identify them as being sufficient without the need of additional First Aiders. Click here to download a Training Course brochure

The course can be split into two or three parts to allow participants to undertake the learning with other work/personal commitments.

By the end of the Emergency First Aid at Work Course the attendies will be able to:

  • Define their role as an emergency first aider.
  • Describe how to minimise risks to themselves and others.
  • Identify first aid equipment and how to use it.
  • Describe how to conduct a scene survey, a casualty assessment and call for help.
  • Demonstrate how to administer Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) using a mannequin doll.
  • Describe how to identify and treat a choking casualty with a partially and completely blocked airway
  • Demonstrate how to control severe external bleeding
  • Describe signs and symptoms of shock and how to manage a casualty who is in shock.
  • Describe how to manage a casualty with a burn and with other minor injuries.


All course attendees will be provided with a Emergency First Aid at work (1 day) certificate valid for 3 years.


Contact us on 0333 016 4224 or E-mail us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for a course programme and course fees.

First aid and accident reporting

First aid and accident reporting


What do you do if there’s an accident at work?

First aid means treating minor injuries at work and giving immediate attention to more serious casualties until medical help is available. Through this initial management of injury or illness suffered at work, lives can be saved and minor injuries prevented from becoming major ones. Reporting accidents and ill health at work is a legal requirement. The enforcing authorities use the information to see the big picture of where injuries, ill health and accidental losses are occurring, and to advise on preventive action.

Do you have at least the minimum firstaid provision at your workplace? As an employer you must provide firstaid equipment, facilities and personnel appropriate for the circumstances in your workplace. The minimum would be a suitably stocked firstaid box and a person appointed to take charge of firstaid arrangements.
Do you know whether you might need to provide more than the minimum?
Do you know which accidents and ill health cases to report, including who should do it, when and how? Employers, the selfemployed and people incontrol of work premises all have duties.
Do you know what accidents cost – and that insurance policies do not cover all the costs?

What law applies?

The Health and Safety (First Aid) Regulations 1981
Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 1995 (RIDDOR)

An example of a health & safety policy statement

Health and safety policy statement

Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974

This is the Health and Safety Policy Statement of;

Our statement of general policy is:

to provide adequate control of the health and safety risks arising from our work activities;
to consult with our employees on matters affecting their health and safety;
to provide and maintain safe plant and equipment;
to ensure safe handling and use of substances;
to provide information, instruction and supervision for employees;
to ensure all employees are competent to do their tasks, and to give them adequate training;
to prevent accidents and cases of workrelated ill health;
to maintain safe and healthy working conditions; and
to review and revise this policy as necessary at regular intervals.

Your risk assessment

Risk assessment helps you protect your workers and your business, as well as comply with the law. It helps you focus on the risks that really matter – the ones with the potential to cause real harm. A risk assessment is simply a careful examination of what in your work could cause harm to people, so that you can weigh up whether you have taken enough precautions or should do more to prevent harm. The law does not expect you to eliminate all risk, but you are required to protect people ‘so far as is reasonably practicable’.

When thinking about your risk assessment, remember:

a hazard is anything that may cause harm, such as chemicals, electricity, working from ladders, an open drawer;
the risk is the chance, high or low, that somebody could be harmed by these and other hazards, together with an indication of how serious the harm could be.

Step 1 Identify the hazards

First you need to work out how people could be harmed.
Step 2 Decide who might be harmed and how Identify groups of people who might be harmed and how they might be harmed, eg ‘shelf stackers may suffer back injury from repeated lifting of boxes’.

Step 3 Evaluate the risks and decide on precautions. Having spotted the hazards, you then need to decide what to do about them. Compare what you currently do with what’s accepted as good practice. If there is a difference, list what needs to be done.

When controlling risks, apply these principles, if possible in this order:

Try a less risky option.
Prevent access to the hazard.
Organise work to reduce exposure to the hazard.
Issue personal protective equipment.
Provide welfare facilities.

Step 4 Record your findings and implement them. If you employ five or more people, the law requires you to record your findings. You can download a form from www.hse.gov.uk/risk/template.pdf. When writing down your results, keep it simple. If, like many businesses, you find that there are quite a lot of improvements that you could make, don’t try to do everything at once. Make a plan of action to deal with the most important things first.

Step 5 Review your risk assessment and update if necessary

Few workplaces stay the same, so it makes sense to review what you are doing on an ongoing basis. Every year or so, formally review where you are to make sure you are still improving, or at least not sliding back. Set a date for the review and put it in your diary so you don’t forget it.

First Aid and Fire Training Courses

Last month Active Fire Management were pleased to be able to provide training across two important subjects when they were commissioned to deliver both Fire Marshal Training and Emergency First Aid in the Workplace Training for the Canute Group who are currently continuing to be one of the fastest growing global supply chain providers operating today.  Canute Haulage Ltd was established in 1977 with two vehicles collecting and delivering bricks and blocks for local builders in the Purfleet area. By 1979 the Canute Fleet had expanded to 20 by winning their first significant building materials contract operating out of Linford.

Within 5 years, Canute’s turnover had grown to over two million and the company graduated from a regional to a national contractor. They acquired Frank Stokes Ltd in 1988 providing them with an operating site in Nottingham beginning the formation of the Canute Group as it’s known as today.

The training was delivered in Coventry and Purfleet and certification was provided to all delegates who passed the courses.

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Our fully approved three day First Aid at Work is a qualification aimed at those who wish to become a First Aider in the workplace, for the purposes of the requirements set by regulations and outcomes from risk assessments.

Why attend a First Aid at Work Training course?

Having qualified first aiders in the workplace is a requirement of employers. Persons gaining this qualification will know that First Aid is the responsibility of everyone involved in the working environment. Its topics are regarded as important to maintaining good practice in the safe, prompt and effective treatment and ill heath in the workplace. Click here to download a Training Course brochure.

By the end of the training session the delegates will be able to:

  • Define their role as a first aider in the workplace.
  • Describe how to minimise risks to themselves and others.
  • Describe how to conduct a scene survey, a casualty assessment and call for help.
  • Demonstrate how to administer Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) for adults using a mannequin doll.
  • Describe how to identify and treat a choking casualty with a partially or a completely blocked airway.
  • Demonstrate how to control severe external bleeding.
  • Describe signs and symptoms of shock and how to manage a casualty who is in shock.
  • Describe how to manage and administer first aid to casualties suffering from minor injuries.
  • Detail how to treat small cuts, bruises, minor burns and small splinters.
  • State first aid treatment for injuries related to bones, muscles, joints, spine, chest, and eyes.
  • Describe how to treat a casualty with a burn or scald, with poisoning and with anaphylactic shock.
  • Define how to identify and treat a casualty suffering from a heart attack, stroke, asthma and diabetic attack.

All course attendees will be provided with a First Aid at Work (3 days) certificate valid for 3 years.


Contact us on 0333 016 4224 or E-mail us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for a course programme and course fees.