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Mapping the public first-aid training landscape: a scoping review
Authors:Claire Louise Heard  Julia M. Pearce  M. Brooke Rogers
Affiliation:1. Research Associate, King's College London, United Kingdom;2. Lecturer in Social Psychology and Security Studies, King's College London, United Kingdom;3. Professor of Behavioural Science and Security, King's College London, United Kingdom
Abstract:While the public can play a vital role in saving lives during emergencies, intervention is only effective if people have the skills, confidence, and willingness to help. This review employs a five-stage framework to systematically analyse first aid and emergency helping literature from 22 countries (predominately in Asia, Australia, Europe, and the United States). The review covers 54 articles that investigate public first-aid knowledge and uptake of first-aid training (40); public confidence in first-aid skills and willingness to help during an emergency (21); and barriers to or enablers of learning first aid and delivering first aid in an emergency (25). The findings identify high levels of perceived knowledge, confidence, and willingness to help, supporting the contention that the public can play a vital role during an emergency. However, the findings also point to low uptake levels, low tested skill-specific knowledge, and barriers to learning first aid and helping, indicating that the first-aid training landscape is in need of improvement.
Keywords:bystander intervention  emergency helping  first-aid training  first aid in disasters  lay bystanders  scoping review
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