The Emergency First Response (EFR) course is one of the foremost international CPR and first-aid training programs. It focuses on building confidence in lay rescuers and increasing their willingness to respond when faced with a medical emergency.
While EFR is a mandatory prerequisite for the PADI Rescue Diver course and professional diving ratings, it is completely dry (no diving required) and open to anyone—divers and non-divers alike.
1. Prerequisites & Duration
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Minimum Age: None. It is open to adults and children alike, provided they can understand and perform the physical skills.
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Prerequisites: None. No prior medical knowledge or scuba certification is required.
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Duration: Typically completed in 1 day (around 5 to 8 hours, depending on group size).
2. Course Structure & Key Skills Learned
The course follows standard, internationally recognized medical guidelines for emergency care and is split into two primary segments:
Phase 1: Primary Care (CPR)
This section teaches you how to respond to life-threatening emergencies. You will learn and practice:
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Scene Assessment & Barrier Use: Ensuring your own safety before helping and using gloves/ventilation masks to prevent disease transmission.
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CPR (Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation): Chest compressions and rescue breaths for adult, child, and infant casualties.
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Airway Management: Handling choking victims.
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Serious Bleeding Management: Using pressure bandages and tourniquets.
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Shock & Spinal Injury Management: Keeping a patient stable and safe.
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AED Deployment (Optional but standard): Learning how to set up and use an Automated External Defibrillator.
Phase 2: Secondary Care (First Aid)
This section focuses on medical situations that are not immediately life-threatening but require stabilizing care until emergency medical services (EMS) arrive:
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Injury Assessment: Conducting a head-to-toe physical evaluation of an injured person.
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Illness Assessment: Identifying medical signs and symptoms.
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Bandaging & Splinting: Managing cuts, scrapes, dislocations, and bone fractures.
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Basic Medical Events: Handling burns, allergic reactions, heat exhaustion, or stings.
3. How Learning Happens
The course is built around a hands-on, relaxed learning environment. Students watch instructional videos, review a workbook, and spend the majority of their time physically practicing skills on medical mannequins and participating in simulated, real-life emergency scenarios with other classmates. A straightforward, multiple-choice quiz completes the certification.
4. Certification Validity
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An official, internationally recognized EFR certification card is issued upon completion.
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The certification is valid for 2 years (24 months), after which a short “Refresher” course is required to keep skills sharp and stay updated on the latest medical guidelines.






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