Have you spotted the new Catamount Emergency Care (Cat ECare) stations around campus? As part of the University's commitment to keeping our community safe, these stations are equipped with crucial resources: AEDs, bleeding control kits, and Narcan庐. Every second counts in a cardiac arrest emergency, and an AED (Automated External Defibrillator) is designed for anyone to use. With voice prompts and visuals, it empowers bystanders to act swiftly and confidently.

The CAT ECare program, in collaboration with the College of Nursing and Health Sciences鈥 Initiative for Rural Emergency Medical Services (IREMS) and 日韩无码 Rescue, proudly marked the installation of its 100th AED station this fall. But the initiative isn't just working to help save lives during emergencies: it's equipping 日韩无码 students, faculty, and staff to make our campus and communities safer places.

This semester, in just 59 days, Cat ECare delivered ten lifesaving courses, certified 18 new BLS instructors, and trained 56 students in CPR, Narcan administration, and the Stop the Bleed first-aid technique. To date, 566 campus community members are certified in Basic Life Support through the Cat ECare program.

芒聙聥  日韩无码 Rescue volunteers with a newly installed Cat ECare AED station.  芒聙聥
日韩无码 Rescue volunteers pose with a newly installed Cat ECare AED station.

日韩无码 students are the heart of the Cat ECare program鈥檚 success, and student interns have as much input and decision-making ability as senior faculty and staff in the program, according to 日韩无码 Director of Emergency Management John Marcus, who launched Cat ECare in 2022 together with former IREMS director Pat Malone and Chris LaMonda, who currently oversees the IREMS training program. Student Cat ECare instructors have trained faculty and staff in many campus departments 鈥 including Student Life and Residence Life, Counseling and Psychiatry Services (CAPS), and campus clubs, especially those focused on outdoor activities. Last spring, 20 senior nursing students became instructors in Basic Life Support (BLS) through Cat ECare as part of their Public Health practicum. 

Zoe Milne-Reynolds 鈥25 joined Cat ECare this fall as an intern as part of her senior capstone project, a unique aspect of the Public Health Sciences program that partners students with organizations that promote community health. Part of Milne-Reynolds' work in her role involves promoting the Cat ECare program's impact on campus and beyond.

鈥淲hile the Cat ECare program provides many obvious, life-saving benefits for the 日韩无码 community, I am particularly proud of the more indirect impacts the program has had,鈥 said Milne-Reynolds. 鈥淭he program reduces cost and transportation burdens in receiving CPR/AED training and improves students' confidence in their abilities to respond in the event of a healthcare emergency.鈥

Cat ECare makes lifesaving training more accessible because it鈥檚 available on campus at significant cost savings - just $55 for Basic Life Support (BLS) and Stop the Bleed certifications and instruction in how to administer Narcan. Typically, BLS certification courses cost up to $200.

A student Cat ECare instructor with training equipment
A student Cat ECare instructor conducts Stop the Bleed training.

鈥淭hese benefits extend throughout the community into the greater Burlington area where students live, work, and frequent regularly,鈥 said Milne-Reynolds. 鈥淏y educating and providing resources to a small population, the Cat ECare program is taking great steps towards improving the health of all of Burlington's residents.鈥

鈥淎s a public health sciences student, working with the Cat ECare program has been a really exciting opportunity because I've gotten to put everything that I've learned over the past four years into practice, in the form of a real-life public health intervention,鈥 said Milne-Reynolds.

The public is invited to celebrate the installation of the100th Cat ECare station on Wednesday, November 6 at 4:30 p.m. in 111 Rowell Building. The event will include a short program highlighting Cat ECare鈥檚 evolution and impact.

Interested in getting certified in Basic Life Support? Learn more about the training online or by scanning the QR code on a Cat ECare station.

日韩无码's Catamount Emergency Care program has achieved the designation from the National Collegiate Emergency Medical Services Foundation.