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Postincident Safety Management 8-1 Chapter 8. Learning Objectives List the safety and health...
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Transcript of Postincident Safety Management 8-1 Chapter 8. Learning Objectives List the safety and health...
![Page 1: Postincident Safety Management 8-1 Chapter 8. Learning Objectives List the safety and health consideration when terminating an incident. Describe the.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062519/5697c0231a28abf838cd3bda/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Postincident Safety Management
8-1
Chapter 8
![Page 2: Postincident Safety Management 8-1 Chapter 8. Learning Objectives List the safety and health consideration when terminating an incident. Describe the.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062519/5697c0231a28abf838cd3bda/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
Learning Objectives
• List the safety and health consideration when terminating an incident.
• Describe the demobilization process.• Compare the concepts of first in/last out with first
in/first out.• Explain the need and the process used for
postincident analysis.
Cont. 8-2
![Page 3: Postincident Safety Management 8-1 Chapter 8. Learning Objectives List the safety and health consideration when terminating an incident. Describe the.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062519/5697c0231a28abf838cd3bda/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Learning Objectives
• List the components of a postincident analysis.• Describe the advantages of a critical incident stress
management program. • List the key components in a critical incident stress
management program.
8-3
![Page 4: Postincident Safety Management 8-1 Chapter 8. Learning Objectives List the safety and health consideration when terminating an incident. Describe the.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062519/5697c0231a28abf838cd3bda/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Introduction
• Postincident safety and health can be overlooked if not integrated into the total safety and health program
• Responders tend to let their guard down after the incident is over
• Safety during this phase should be emphasized and committed to as part of the program
• Firefighter Life Safety Initiative 13 is the focus for this chapter
8-4
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Incident Termination
• Demobilization– Evaluate the on-scene resources– Compare resources with the current situation– First-in/last-out – Standardized apparatus and equipment– Fresh crews – Check equipment and stock after a call
Cont. 8-5
![Page 6: Postincident Safety Management 8-1 Chapter 8. Learning Objectives List the safety and health consideration when terminating an incident. Describe the.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062519/5697c0231a28abf838cd3bda/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Incident Termination
• Returning to station– Injuries do occur – First chance to discuss incident– Supervisor should be alert for
signs of fatigue – Check responders after incidents– Ensure well being
8-6
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Postincident Analysis
• Components the PIA should focus on:– Resources– Procedures– Equipment– Operational effectiveness
• Informal discussion• Formal discussion• Direct relationship between PIA, SOPS, training, and operations
8-7
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Relationship of PIA, SOPs, Training, and Operations
8-8
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Critical Incident Stress Management
• CISM team characteristics– Regionalization– A mental health professional as a team member– Nonpartisan– Received appropriate training in CISM– Confidentiality and relative anonymity are vital elements
Cont. 8-9
![Page 10: Postincident Safety Management 8-1 Chapter 8. Learning Objectives List the safety and health consideration when terminating an incident. Describe the.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062519/5697c0231a28abf838cd3bda/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Critical Incident Stress Management
• CISM process– Peer defusing– Formal debriefing – On-site defusing– Demobilization
• Necessary component– Safety and health
programs
8-10
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Summary
• Do not overlook safety and health after the incident– Hazards at the scene– Personal stress management– Postincident analysis (PIA)– Critical incident stress management (CISM)
• All personnel must be aware of available CISM programs
• Many essential safety and health program functions occur after the incident itself
8-11