Teacher With a Stop the Bleed Kit Saves a Student in the Saugus High School Shooting

RSS

November 19, 2019

Choir teacher, Katie Holt, used a Stop the Bleed Kit to help save the life of a student who ran into the classroom after she had been shot twice during the Saugus High School shooting.

 

Via weareteachers.com:

By Kimberly Moran

2 students were killed, and 5 wounded after an active shooter student opened fire on the Saugus High School campus in Santa Clarita, California on November 19, 2019.

 

When I became a teacher, I knew I’d probably hand out a lot of Band-Aids and occasionally have to call on the school nurse for playground emergencies. (I’ll never forget watching one of my students flip off the top of a slide.) It boggles my mind, though, that a student in the Saugus shootings in California was saved because her teacher had a classroom gunshot wound kit on hand and knew how to use it. 

We have become a nation of people who must be prepared for gunshot wounds.

We’ve seen teachers training for school shootings in ways that feel terrifying. We’re doing lockdown drills, learning to recognize gunfire, and finding out how to soothe students who are terrified. It’s not just teachers who are preparing to treat gunshot wounds. There are American Red Cross trainings for workplace gun violence as well as for citizens who don’t go to an office each day. So, it makes sense that there would be teacher trainings as well. After all “there were at least 85 incidents of gunfire on school grounds in 2019, resulting in 17 deaths and 54 injuries.”

We can no longer pretend it’s unlikely to happen at our school. While we want to be prepared, we must also acknowledge that while it’s amazing that this Santa Clarita, California, teacher saved her student’s life, it shouldn’t be on teachers to do that. We need to make more meaningful reforms to prevent school shootings in the first place. In the meantime, though, we must face reality.

The shortage of school nurses makes it harder to back away from gunshot wound teacher training.

The school nurse is quickly joining the ranks of the disappearing school librarian. According to recent statistics, about 40 percent of schools only budget for a part-time nurse and 25 percent have no nurse at all. When teachers are called to take on other roles they aren’t trained for, it’s hard to know how to prioritize. If your school nurse isn’t on duty every hour of every school day, who is the one trained to help if the worst happens at your school? Does your school talk about gunshot wound kits and where they might be located?

How do gunshot wound kits get into schools?

Just like any other school supply kits, a district might budget to ensure gunshot wound kits are available. They could put them in individual classrooms or place them strategically, like AEDs and other emergency equipment. A national awareness campaign called Stop the Bleed encourages bystanders to become trained, equipped, and empowered to help in a bleeding emergency before professional help arrives. There are also grants available to get Stop the Bleed kits in schools.

How do teachers get trained to use gunshot wound kits?

Teachers can get training at American Red Cross locations, online, and through the Stop the Bleed website. These locations also offer onsite workshops during school in-service days.

These can be scary times for the education community, but we do not have to feel powerless. We can do what we can to improve the odds of victims and feel safer. Then, we can take it a step further to learn more about how to prevent school shootings.

 

Note:  Stop the Bleed Kits should be deployed at every school, and all teachers and staff should receive Bleeding Control Training.  Learn more:

Stop the Bleed Kits

Emergency Barricades

 

 

Keep Reading...

 

Previous Post Next Post

  • Blue Monster Prep