We have received many comments about our classes from our satisfied customers*. Here are the reviews and ratings from our students:
*The reviews and ratings below are from customers who have purchased a certificate and published a review and/or rating at the end of the transaction
9 years ago
Easy to use, understand, and certify.
9 years ago
Easy
9 years ago
The question I missed was “When a head injury occurs, 911 should be called immediately.” My answer was false. It states, “ If any on list of certain symptoms occur after head injury call 911 immediately. It DOES NOT say to call 911 immediately when head injury occurs. Unless I misread
9 years ago
Great courcse
9 years ago
Great training! Learned a lot of important information that would help me.
9 years ago
Nice thorough overview of CPR/First Aid
9 years ago
The course was easy to understand.
9 years ago
This course is relatively easy to understand.
9 years ago
Great full
9 years ago
Great information without being overwhelming. Thank you
9 years ago
Thank you for the refresher course.
9 years ago
This is a great course
9 years ago
This is a great course
9 years ago
This is a great course
9 years ago
This is a great course
9 years ago
This is a great course
9 years ago
I think the test could be a little harder.
9 years ago
Many of the "treatments" are either outdated, dangerous, or plain wrong. The first aid training should be a shorter version of what EMS professionals are trained to do. YOUR safety first, then the patient. CPR is not the answer for everything, especially for just unconscious patients. Open chest wounds should be treated with an occlusive dressing in the event it is a sucking chest wound. If you seal it off on all four sides, as your course says to do, you will most likely cause respiratory distress or begin to suffocate your patient. Don't apply ointments to any burns past a first degree. Even in that case, a first aid provider should never put ointments on someone. Make sure you clarify never to administer anything by mouth to an unconscious patient. I know, it's common sense, right? No. I've watched people try to do it and nearly choke people because they just don't understand or haven't been trained properly, or told. Really? On electroshock you listed turning off the power source as number three. That should be NUMBER ONE before you even go near the patient. Thank you, have a nice day. -A 23 year old caregiver, certified EMT, certified EMR. and person who has actually performed most of these on real people in a professional setting, correctly
9 years ago
GREAT, EASY ! LEARNED SOME NEW INFORMATION.
9 years ago
Great course!! Learned alot!
9 years ago
Good information, Thanks