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Medics to treat over 1K in disaster training exercise

The training exercise will provide mass casualty experience for paramedics

LONDON — Hundreds of actors - each with a different story - will help make the scenario as realistic as possible and test the clinical skills of the ambulance crews responding to a building collapsing onto a tube train. Ambulance crews on the ground will encounter realistic scenarios that will reflect the graphic nature of this type of major incident.

“Over four days ambulance staff will treat hundreds of injuries that would be typical during an incident like this including fractures, broken limbs, head injuries, amputations, spinal injuries and respiratory conditions,” Director of Operations Paul Woodrow said.

“Our ambulance crews are highly trained clinicians and in the event of a major incident be dispatched to the scene quickly start assessing and treating patients, saving lives and ensuring patients receive the treatment they need.”

An incident control room will be opened where staff from the emergency operations center will also practice their response to a major incident which involves managing information from staff at the scene, ensuring that the most appropriate resources are dispatched, and coordinating where patients will be conveyed.

Around 175 clinical staff will attend each day including emergency ambulance crews, paramedics, advanced paramedics, and specialist staff from the Hazardous Area Response Team who are trained to provide life-saving medical care in dangerous environments.

London’s Air ambulance and the Medical Emergency Response Team (MERIT) will also be supporting the response during the exercise.

Paramedic students and medical students are along the large number of people volunteering as casualties throughout the exercise, to make the scenario as realistic as possible for emergency teams.

“In the event of a major incident we have clear processes and plans in place including an alert system for staff who have proved they are always willing to support our response - even when not on duty,” Paul said. “By testing our responses to an incident like this we’ll increase our preparedness for any major incident that affects London. It is also a great opportunity to test how we work with emergency services and all other partners across London.”

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