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Level 2 First Aid Vs Level 3 First Aid At Work Training: How These Courses Differ

If your employer is offering you the opportunity to become a workplace first aid provider and has stated that they require completion of a level 3 first aid training course, then you may wonder just what this training involves. While some workplaces that are deemed low-hazard environments often require potential first aid attendants to obtain only first aid level 2 training, others encourage employees to obtain their level 3 first aid certifications that prepare them to tackle a much wider variety of employee health emergencies. 

Read on to learn more about level 2 and level 3 first aid work so you understand how these training programs differ and what you will learn during your workplace first aid training course. 

Level 2 First Aid: Emergency First Aid at Work

During a Level 2 first aid training course, an employee learns how to help fellow employees in the midst of common medical emergencies and those who become wounded while at the workplace. This training course typically takes about one full workday, or about 8 hours, to complete. 

A few of the skills taught in this course include how to perform CPR, how to use an automated external defibrillator (AED), what to do when a fellow employee is choking, and how to help a worker who is in the midst of a breathing emergency, such as an asthma attack. In addition, this course includes instruction on wound care, how to perform the check, call, care protocol, and how to help someone suffering from a circulation emergency, such as a stroke. 

Level 3 First Aid: First Aid at Work

A level 3 first aid training course prepares a workplace first aid attendant to assist other workers experiencing a wider array of emergency and illness types. This course is typically provided in a multi-day format that requires a few days of training. 

During this training program, an employee learns all of the important lifesaving techniques taught in the level 2 Emergency First Aid at Work course, including CPR skills, AED usage, and more. However, this course also prepares a worker to identify the signs of various acute illnesses other employees may develop during the workday, how to identify the signs of a spine, neck, or head injury and help a person who may have just developed one, how to help a fellow employee who may have ingested or been exposed to a substance that is considered poisonous, and more. 

If your employer is asking employees to sign up for their first aid attendant program that requires completion of a level 3 first aid course, now you understand how this course compares to a level 2 first aid course and what you will learn when attending the training program. 


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