News
YouTube Videos
Photo Galleries
Newsletter
|
News
& Media
Chris Kerley, the Director
of Pro EMS Center for MEDICS
Cambridge, Mass.,
April 10, 2009 - Chris Kerley
leads the Center for MEDICS, a training
center in Cambridge, Massachusetts, that
is home to the first fully functioning
simulation lab for emergency medical services
in the Northeast.
Kerley helped spearhead the development
of this center, which boasts lifelike human
patient simulators that can speak and demonstrate
symptoms of illness and trauma; computer
systems that record every step a trainee
takes in treating a mannequin "patient;"
and large video screens so that trainees
can watch, and analyze, themselves in action
after they perform scenarios. In addition
to the lab itself, which offers both an
emergency room and apartment setting for
simulations, Kerley also has a large classroom
where he lectures on everything from emergency
procedures to pharmacology.
"We are using this
state-of-the-art equipment to better all
providers in the Cambridge EMS system,
to allow them to analyze their skills as
well as their mistakes, and to bring everyone
together so that they work as a team,"
Kerley said. The Center for MEDICS is an
affiliated company of Professional Ambulance
Service, which has provided emergency medical
services since 1969.
But it's not just employees
that Kerley trains. Hospitals in the Greater
Boston area send Kerley their doctors and
nurses to learn emergency medicine, as
well as fire departments and police departments
from both larger cities and small towns.
Kerley puts them through the paces of medical
techniques that are hard to learn anywhere
else because the equipment is not widely
available. For example, learning how to
treat babies or young children in a trauma
situation is difficult since not every
training center has a mannequin of the
right size. Kerley is going the distance
- his lab will soon house the first mannequin
of a newborn infant, "SimNewb," as it is
called - allowing the Center for MEDICS
to offer the only neo-natal training program
in emergency services in Massachusetts
using this lifelike simulator.
Originally from Ireland, Chris arrived
at the Center for MEDICS by way of Northeastern
University, where he served as the clinical
coordinator for EMS instruction at the
school. His arrival in Boston followed
a diverse international career, which ranged
from serving as a mountain rescue instructor
for the Irish Department of Defense; to
working as a refugee camp manager for the
United Nations in Ethiopia; to working
as a paramedic in South Africa and serving
as a Special EMS Advisor for the Government
of Botswana. A graduate of the University
of South Africa, Kerley describes himself
as, fundamentally, an innovative teacher
devoted to education and learning.
"I enjoy my job
and the opportunity to help improve the
standards of EMS in different countries,"
Kerley said. "I went into teaching because
I could impact 20 people in a classroom
and through them, exponentially impact
others."
Media Contact:
Christine Dunn
Savoir Media
cdunn@savoirmedia.com
(617) 484-1660
|