Community
Hunter farmer calls for wider first aid training uptake after life-saving intervention
A Hunter father's experience using first aid to save his son's life is prompting a push for more locals to undertake certified training.
Community
A Hunter father's experience using first aid to save his son's life is prompting a push for more locals to undertake certified training.

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A Hunter father is leveraging a harrowing personal experience to advocate for broader first aid training across the region. Ben Getley has reunited with the instructor who gave him a refresher course a fortnight before he used those skills to save his son's life, demonstrating the potentially life-or-death difference that timely training can make.
Getley's call for more locals to undertake first aid certification highlights a community health gap that extends beyond emergency situations. In regional areas like the Hunter, response times from emergency services can be longer than in urban centres, making community-level first aid capability particularly valuable. The time it takes for ambulances to arrive in remote or semi-rural parts of the region can mean the difference between recovery and tragedy, underscoring why basic life-saving skills matter.
His advocacy comes as a reminder to Central Coast residents and workplaces that current first aid certifications may have lapsed. Community organisations, schools, and employers across the region could use Getley's experience as a prompt to arrange or promote refresher training. Local training providers report strong demand when these stories surface, suggesting the region is primed to take first aid capability more seriously.
Sources: nbnnews.com.au.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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