Posted p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18, 2018

Precautionary effort is part of a national awareness campaign.
Precautionary effort is part of a national awareness campaign
At a Gundersen trauma conference two years ago, UW-La Crosse senior Brittney Trybula heard stories about Sandy Hook Elementary School, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School and other mass shootings. Had people on the scene received prior training and had access to triage materials, more lives may have been saved. It got the bio-medical, pre-physician assistant major from Neillsville thinking. After working at Gundersen Tri-State Ambulance for a year, Trybula took action to get the western Wisconsin region better prepared.“I thought it would be a good idea to be proactive rather than reactive,” she explains. “It’s probably only a matter of time before an incident like this hits La Crosse.” Trybula aligned with Stop the Bleed, a national program initiated by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security under President Barack Obama in October 2015, following the Sandy Hook shooting nearly three years earlier. The program cultivates grassroots efforts of encouraging bystanders to become trained, equipped and empowered to help in a bleeding emergency before professional help arrives. “It can be used in any situation that needs bleeding cessation,” she notes. Since Trybula proposed the program in La Crosse, she has worked with Gundersen Tri-State Ambulance, La Crosse first responders and community members. Her goal is to get Stop the Bleed kits added to all 120 automated external defibrillators — AEDs — in the community, and train a large number of first responders and others within the community. [caption id="attachment_53240" align="alignright" width="200"]“I thought it would be a good idea to be proactive rather than reactive. It’s probably only a matter of time before an incident like this hits La Crosse.”
