Technical rescue

"Technical rescue" refers to the aspects of saving life or property that employ the use of tools and skills that exceed those normally reserved for emergency medical services or firefighting. These disciplines include vehicle and machinery rescue, confined-space rescue, rope rescue, trench and excavation rescue, structural collapse rescue, water and ice rescue, and wilderness search and rescue. In the United States, technical rescues will often have multiple jurisdictions operating together to effect the rescue, and will often use the Incident Command System to manage the incident and resources at scene.

NFPA standards 1006 and 1670 state that all rescuers must have medical training to perform any technical rescue operation, including cutting the vehicle itself during an extrication. Therefore, in most all rescue environments, whether it is the EMS department or fire department that runs the rescue, the actual rescuers who cut the vehicle and run the extrication scene or perform any rescue such as rope, water, etc., are emergency medical responders, emergency medical technicians, or paramedics, as technical rescue is a comprehensive patient-centered process.

References

  • Vines, Thomas Verdo; Steve Hudson (2004-08-23). High Angle Rescue Techniques (3rd ed.). St. Louis: Elsevier Mosby-Jems. ISBN 0-323-01914-5. OCLC 56621939.
  • Vines, Thomas Verdo; Steve Hudson (2004-08-23). Field Guide to Accompany High Angle Rescue Techniques (3rd ed.). St. Louis: Elsevier Mosby-Jems. ISBN 0-323-01913-7. OCLC 56622055.

See also


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