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Hazen Union Students Learn Emergency First-Aid Skills

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HYDE PARK – Hazen Union High School students Haley Blair and Paige Cruickshank participated in a First Aid Field Day (FAFD) at Green Mountain Tech and Career Center Saturday, Oct. 26

Hazen Union School freshman Haley Blair (center), Lamoille Union senior Merlin Gwodz (left) and Lyndon Institute sophomore Nicol Jones (on ground) participate in a staged mass casualty scenario at a Governor’s Institutes of Vermont First Aid Field Day, Saturday, Oct. 26 at Green Mountain Tech & Career Center in Hyde Park. The exercise at the end of the training day, is designed to allow students to put their first aid training to immediate use in a fun way.
photo by Ross Johnston, Governor’s Institutes of Vermont.

Approximately three-dozen students from all over the state participated in the program leading students to careers in health and medicine by becoming certified as Vermont Emergency First Responders (VEFR), a step toward becoming an EMT.

The one day FAFD adventure was part of The Governors Institute of Vermont’s (GIV) Health & Medicine Institute. Students received training in CPR, Stop the Bleed and other basic first aid skills. They spoke with local first responders about what it’s like to work in the field, putting their new skills to use in the afternoon through a simulated mass casualty incident simulation.

The program doubled in size this year, going from 70 students to 140 students. The GIV Health & Medicine Institute added a second location at Castleton this summer.

Hazen Union freshman Haley Blair (right in brown hoodie) exclaims at the scene of a staged accident during a Governor’s Institutes of Vermont First Aid Field Day Saturday at GMTCC while Lamoille UHS senior Merlin Gwozdz (center, standing) and other students look on. Simulated patients Nico Jones (sitting), former Hazen student Megan Cane, now attending GMTCC (black jacket with bloody face), Caylen Underwood (nearest camera) play role in a mass casualty scenario.
photo by Ross Johnston, Governor’s Institutes of Vermont

In 2024, 75% percent of students received financial assistance to attend and 55% came from families with low incomes (2024).

Northern Vermont Area Health Education Center was a key partner for the event, working to increase access to health care careers for Vermont’s youth.

The Governor’s Institutes of Vermont (GIV) is a nonprofit organization giving Vermont high school students the opportunity to dive deep into a topic of interest for an intensive one to two weeks on a college campus. To learn more, visit https://giv.org Applications for summer 2025 will open in January.

An ealier versin of this story indicated stidents had been trained as first responders, a certification indicating specific skills have been learned.

Editor

Paul Fixx is editor of The Hardwick Gazette and lives in Hardwick.

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EDITOR
Paul Fixx

ADVERTISING
Sandy Atkins, Raymonda Parchment, Dawn Gustafson, Paul Fixx

CIRCULATION
Dawn Gustafson

PRODUCTION
Sandy Atkins, Dawn Gustafson, Dave Mitchell, Raymonda Parchment

REPORTER
Raymonda Parchment

SPORTS WRITERS
Ken Brown
Eric Hanson

WEATHER REPORTER
Tyler Molleur

PHOTOGRAPHER
Vanessa Fournier

CARTOONIST
Julie Atwood

CONTRIBUTORS
Trish Alley, Sandy Atkins, Brendan Buckley, Hal Gray, Abrah Griggs, Eleanor Guare, Henry Homeyer, Pat Hussey, Willem Lange, Cheryl Luther Michaels, Tyler Molleur, Kay Spaulding, Liz Steel, John Walters

INTERNS
Cloey Camley, Hazen Union School
Claire Charlow, UVM Community News Service
Will Helms, Hazen Union School
Eisha Qureshi, UVM Community News Service