This document provides information about first aid and CPR procedures at Trane. It outlines when to call 911 for life-threatening injuries or illnesses, and when to call a posted first aider for non-emergency situations. It lists potential medical emergencies and instructs employees to be aware of their own symptoms. It describes how to summon a first aider by phone or yelling, and lists the current first aiders. It encourages employees to complete a medical card and medication list, and to update their emergency contact information regularly. Finally, it provides guidance on how employees can help in a medical emergency situation.
This document provides information about first aid and CPR procedures at Trane. It outlines when to call 911 for life-threatening injuries or illnesses, and when to call a posted first aider for non-emergency situations. It lists potential medical emergencies and instructs employees to be aware of their own symptoms. It describes how to summon a first aider by phone or yelling, and lists the current first aiders. It encourages employees to complete a medical card and medication list, and to update their emergency contact information regularly. Finally, it provides guidance on how employees can help in a medical emergency situation.
This document provides information about first aid and CPR procedures at Trane. It outlines when to call 911 for life-threatening injuries or illnesses, and when to call a posted first aider for non-emergency situations. It lists potential medical emergencies and instructs employees to be aware of their own symptoms. It describes how to summon a first aider by phone or yelling, and lists the current first aiders. It encourages employees to complete a medical card and medication list, and to update their emergency contact information regularly. Finally, it provides guidance on how employees can help in a medical emergency situation.
Let us help you When to Call 8911 • Any life threatening or injury situation • If you are light headed and think you may lose consciousness • Alone in the facility and seriously injured • When someone is injured seriously When to call a Posted First Aider • Any time there is an injury or when someone may need First Aid or CPR • Any time someone is feeling ill or needs to use the First Aid room • If you notice any type of irregular behavior in your coworker • If any non Trane employee changes behavior dramatically Get help as quickly as possible Be aware of your own condition • Are you dizzy ? • Light headed? • Chilled and sweating? • Shortness of breath ? • Pain in center of chest spreading to neck, shoulder or arms? • Something gets caught in your throat • Sudden weakness/numbness of the face • Loss of speech / trouble talking or understanding speech • Sudden severe headache • Are you diabetic? eating or checking you blood sugar? • Are you allergic to certain things / been stung by a bee before? How to Summon Your Posted First Aider • We are trained to help • Pick up the nearest phone • Dial 960 - company wide page • Red Sticker below phone display states location of emergency • Call Operator - ‘0’ • Yell - “Help” Know who your Posted First Aiders are • Anastasia Adorable • Tony Lee • Jay Behnken • Mark Martin • Chad Bjorklund • Bill McNaughton • Angie Blaser • Sue Rasmusson • Clare Deming • Tracy Scobba • Terry Dragich • Gray Seever • Steve Gonzalez • Dane Taival • Doug Jost • Bonnie Tenner • Brad Klatt • Carl Wittkowske • Bob La Casse • Jim Wroblewski Time is critical - do what you can before the unexpected happens • Complete a Med card so First Aiders know your condition ahead of time and can prepare (See HR for the Med card) • Taking medications? - keep a list in your pocket • Let us know any special needs for your condition • Update information and the emergency contact info in Human Resources 2 times per year Help your Posted First Aiders • If a posted First Aider asks for your help - listen, and do what is asked • Call 8911 - it is OK to call more than once • If you aren’t needed - stay out of the way • Keep others away - keep area clear • Help direct emergency personnel • Respect the privacy of others Emergency