AVERT (Active Violence Emergency Response Training) | Weekly Open Enrollment Class at Our Facility
AVERT (Active Violence Emergency Response Training) | Weekly Open Enrollment Class at Our Facility
AVERT offers life-saving strategies to help you anticipate potential danger, react quickly if active violence occurs, and become an immediate responder to life-threatening bleeding.
With AVERT, you'll get unmatched training and product solutions that prepare you for active violence and acute bleeding situations, wherever you are.
AVERT combines active shooter and bleeding control training to give you and your team the skills you need in almost any emergency situation. With AVERT training, you'll learn under realistic circumstances how to recognize the signs of danger, react appropriately, and make rapid survival decisions
AVERT is even more than active shooter response training
When violence occurs, seconds count, and you can't always wait for EMS to arrive. AVERT is an active shooter training course that also enables you to become an immediate responder by learning emergency stop the bleed techniques. AVERT teaches how to:
- Recognize warning signs using situational awareness
- Decide whether to escape, evade or attack
- Apply critical stop the bleeding techniques
- Respond quickly and confidently in an emergency
Why your organization needs active shooter response training with AVERT
Active shooter incidents are unpredictable, and they can evolve rapidly. During the chaos, anyone involved can play a vital role in lessening the impact of an active shooter incident. Active Violence Emergency Response Training (AVERT) prepares your team with active shooter training resources that help you and your organization understand warning signs and respond to a potential active shooter incident.
Recent active shooter incidents have shown the importance of a rapid response. Every second counts when active violence occurs and active shooter training with AVERT teaches you the tools that allow you to quickly react and make decisions on whether to escape, evade, or attack.