Whether you want CPR & AED Training & Certification in as little as two/three hours with our online training or a more robust, customizable option like you get with our DIY training kits or on-site training, we can help you get the CPR & AED Training & Certification you want in the way you want it and at a price you can afford. There is no need to find CPR & AED Training & Certification near you. With our courses, you can train and get certified from anywhere.
Our XXX training course is regulation compliant, and our online version fulfills classroom training requirements. Each class contains sections on CPR and AED procedures.
This presentation includes intermittent practice quiz questions to prepare for the final written exam included with the course. In addition to the written exam, this course also includes a checklist for employers to use when administering a practical exam as required by Canada.
Estimated Training Length: Because everyone learns and progresses at different speeds, the amount of time you spend taking this training will vary. However, the estimated time for this training is 30 – 60 minutes.
Intended Audience:
SOR/86-304, 16.1 – First Aid
SOR/86-304, 16.2 – General
SOR/86-304, 16.3 – First Aid Attendants
SOR/86-304, 16.5 – First Aid Stations
SOR/86-304, 16.6 – Communication of Information
SOR/86-304, 16.7 – First Aid Supplies and Equipment
SOR/86-304, 16.9 – First Aid Rooms
SOR/86-304, 16.11 – Transportation
SOR/86-304, 16.12 – Teaching First Aid
SOR/86-304, 16.13 – Records
In one year alone, 475,000 Americans dies from cardiac arrest. (AHA)
Nearly 45% of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest victims survived when bystander CPR was administered. (AHA)
Immediate CPR and early defibrillation with an AED can more than double a victim’s chance of survival. (New England Journal of Medicine)
The 3 steps of CPR can be abbreviated to CAB—Compressions, Airway, breathing. When a heart stops beating, or is only quivering, blood stops flowing throughout the body. CPR is when a person performs chest compressions and gives breaths to a patient who has no pulse or who isn’t breathing. Chest compressions, combined with breathing into the patient, help circulate the oxygenated blood throughout the body and into the brain in order to resuscitate the victim.
No, CPR is not 15 compressions to 2 breaths. Perform 30 compressions to 2 breaths. The average rate should be 100-120 compressions per minute, meaning that 30 compressions should take you between 15 and 18 seconds.
You should use an AED if you see someone suddenly collapse and discover that they aren’t breathing and don’t have a pulse.
Our CPR & AED training only covers how to perform CPR and use an AED. Our First Aid training covers CPR & AED plus other essential lifesaving skills, like controlling bleeding, treating shock, and more.