Softball, soccer and hiking can make for great day of recreation, but injuries and emergencies are no walk in the park.
That’s why faculty and students from the University of Virginia School of Education and Human Development and the Claudius Crozet Park board of directors designed an emergency action plan for when great days turn sour.
The partnership’s goal was to create and test a plan that could reduce the amount of time from the collapse of an athlete or park patron to the response from the emergency management system.
“Unfortunately, each year in the United States lives are lost in sport due to emergent situations such as cardiac arrest, heat stroke or head injuries,” said Jake Resch, associate professor of kinesiology and the primary facilitator of the partnership. “A well-designed and, more importantly, practiced emergency action plan may prevent deaths associated with sport.”
On a sunny Sunday last month, UVA students tested the plan by joining forces with the park board, the Crozet Fire Department and the Western Albemarle Rescue Squad. UVA Health’s Pegasus program, the air and ground critical care transport service, also joined in.