K9 - Tactical Emergency Casualty Care
K9-TECC Level II
K911-Advanced builds upon the skills learned in K911-Primacy and is designed for extreme adventurers and professional responders who may find themselves in harms way from natural or man-made disasters, extreme sports, austere environments, or who simply want advanced skills. This course is presented by former Special Forces and veteran tactical paramedics. This course also covers how to plan for, respond to and recover from incidents and events involving or utilizing working K9s
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You'll Learn:- Human vs. K9 triage
- K9-TCCC/K9-TECC principals (K9-Tactical Combat Casualty Care/K9-Tactical Emergency Casualty Care) - Advanced Medical Interventions (to include chest decompression, Bloat decompression, surgical airways, etc.) - Advanced Field Medical Kits - Incident Management using K9 assets - Emergent Transport Considerations & Destination Policies - Restrain & Move a Wounded K9 - Advanced K9 Heat Injuries Treatments - K9 Medical Support Equipment - Pre-Mission K9 Medical Support to extend K9 resiliency during tactical operations |
Prerequisite: K911-Primacy
Class Length: 16 hours (2-days)
This course meet or exceeds all Canine Tactical Combat Casualty Care for Medical Professionals (K9-TCCC-MP) standards
Host a Course
Get free slots when you host!
We come to you. You provide up to 18 students and only pay for 16.
Hosting is a great way to save money and train your entire group!
Click below to host a course, flexible dates/times available.
*Additional travel expenses may apply for clients outside of Colorado. Contact us for details.
We come to you. You provide up to 18 students and only pay for 16.
Hosting is a great way to save money and train your entire group!
Click below to host a course, flexible dates/times available.
*Additional travel expenses may apply for clients outside of Colorado. Contact us for details.
Hosting for up to 18 students : $6,399.95*
Prior to March 2014, responders in Colorado could not lawfully provide care to working canines without violating the “Colorado Veterinary Practice Act.” The 2014 passage of Senate Bill 14-039, effectively repealed the Act, opening the door for responders to be properly trained to and actually provide this long neglected need.