Hanna in her school uniform (10 year old who saved her mum after learning first aid at school) and her mum Michelle.

For the very first time, school children across England will learn lifesaving skills as part of the school curriculum, a monumental moment after ten years of campaigning by the British Red Cross and partners.

Concerning new research reveals over one fifth of children polled in the North West have experienced a situation where someone needed first aid  but more than half of children  said they would feel helpless to act if they witnessed an accident and someone was injured. The research is being released by the British Red Cross ahead of World First Aid Day and to coincide with the launch of the pilot of first aid in schools.

Nine out of ten children agreed that knowing first aid skills would make them feel more confident to help in a first aid emergency – highlighting how learning first aid will empower young people and help to create a generation of lifesavers.

The poll also shows:

Over nine out of ten children  in the North West agreed that learning how to save a life is one of the most important lessons they could learn at school.
98 per cent of parents of 5-18 year olds in the North West surveyed back children learning first aid and lifesaving skills as a compulsory part of the school curriculum.

A separate study by the British Red Cross found that up to 59 per cent of deaths from injuries could be prevented if first aid had been given before the medical services arrived . The actions of the first person at the scene are vital – and can mean the difference between life and death.

After attending a first aid club at her school, Hanna Floyd, then 11, was quickly able to put her first aid knowledge into practice when her mum Michelle collapsed at their home in Bury.

Hanna knew she needed to act quickly to help her mum but did not panic when she called for an ambulance.

Michelle, from Bury said:

“Hanna was amazing. She knew what to do because she had practiced calling 999 at school.

“I think everybody should learn first aid because nobody knows when a situation like this could happen. I am extremely grateful to the school for teaching first aid.”

The curriculum changes come under the introduction of Relationships, Sex and Health Education and mean that from September 2020 all pupils in state-funded schools in England will learn first aid.

Primary school children will be taught basic first aid for example, how to call emergency services or how to help someone with a head injury.

Secondary school children will learn lifesaving skills such as how to help someone who is having a cardiac arrest.

Around 1,600 schools across England have signed up to start teaching Relationships, Sex and Health Education early from this September, according to the Department for Education.

Over 300 schools have already signed up to receive free British Red Cross first aid education resources to support teachers to start teaching first aid this year.

The British Red Cross is committed to campaigning for first aid education to be taught in all schools once a year, every year across the whole of the UK.

Joe Mulligan, Head of First Aid Education at the British Red Cross said:

“The launch of first aid on the school curriculum in England celebrates a landmark commitment by Government to create a future generation of lifesavers. Our research released for World First Aid Day highlights how vital first aid lessons are in teaching and empowering children to feel they are able to help in an emergency. These aren’t just skills that young people will be able to use now, but will be able to take with them into adulthood. We need to build strong communities who know to help in a crisis, we are now a step closer to achieving this.”

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