Name the first move before the timer starts.
Direct Pressure First
A forearm cut is bleeding steadily. What is your first move?
A forearm cut is bleeding steadily. What is your first move?
Stay with the cue until the drill opens the coaching.
Carry one lesson into a scenario, guide, or the calm path.
Run the first minute cleanly
Read the cue once, then hit start and keep the first move clean.
- 1Read
- 2Practice
- 3Review
A forearm cut is bleeding steadily. What is your first move?
One focused rep. No extra noise.
Keep the feedback compact
Practice the callout, apply pressure, and escalate early if bleeding is severe or not controlled.
Focus on the first clear move, not the full treatment plan.
See the full lesson version of this cue
This public drill stays action-first. HeartTrak turns the same cue into a guided Watch, Read, and Review lab for assigned teams.
Lock the scene first, then activate the Emergency Assessment Plan before patient contact.
Show the scene pause, the hazard scan, a fast PPE check, and direct role assignment before anyone crowds the casualty.
Name the hazard, direct one person to call EMS, and clear the response lane before contact.
Manual anchor: Emergency Assessment Plan
Video cue: stop, scan, point, assign, enterPublic preview only. Official Watch, Read, Review, assignments, and certificates stay inside HeartTrak.
Use one guide or scenario next
Practice first, then open one guide or scenario while the response is still fresh.
Finish with one useful next rep
Open one related guide or scenario while the cue is fresh. Save this drill if it helped.
- Open one item
- Keep what helped
- Ask only when ready
Keep for later
Use this only when the public step is ready to become a team rollout.

