Prepare and Respond
Briefings, equipment checks, PPE and hazard awareness before arrival.
Prepare and respond road accident rescue work begins before the crew reaches the scene.
Responders need reliable task information, operationally ready equipment, suitable personal
protective clothing and equipment, and a shared understanding of anticipated hazards. Good
preparation reduces confusion, strengthens teamwork and supports safer decisions on arrival.
Part 2 Progress Tracker
Refresh each section as you work through the preparation phase.
Learning Summary
Part 2 focuses on the first operational stage of undertake road accident rescue:
preparing and responding. It explains why briefing information matters, how equipment
readiness supports safe work, why PPE must match the task, and how crews use en route
communication to anticipate risks before they arrive.
Confirm the task
Understand the incident information provided through the briefing and organisational process.
Ready the equipment
Road rescue tools must be checked, serviced and operationally ready for possible deployment.
Select suitable PPE
Protective clothing and equipment should reflect the nature of the rescue operation.
Discuss anticipated hazards
While responding, teams should share likely risks and build a common hazard picture.
Receive the Briefing and Confirm the Rescue Task
Prepare and respond road accident rescue actions begin with information.
A briefing gives the crew its first operational picture and helps members understand
what may be required before they reach the scene.
Briefings create a starting point
The course requires operation and task information to be obtained through a briefing
in accordance with organisational procedures. This briefing may confirm where the incident
is, what has been reported and what rescue capability may be needed.
Even when information is limited, it creates a foundation for the crew to prepare equipment,
consider likely risks and clarify the response focus.
Useful task information shapes preparation
Important details may include environmental hazards, incident location, responding agencies,
the type and number of casualties and the type and number of vehicles involved.
This information does not replace on-scene assessment. However, it helps the crew arrive
with a stronger readiness posture and fewer avoidable unknowns.
A clear briefing does not solve the incident, but it gives the rescue team a disciplined
starting point.
Check and Ready Road Rescue Equipment
Before rescue tools are needed, crews must know they are operationally ready.
Equipment readiness is not a small housekeeping step. It directly affects safety,
capability and speed once the rescue scene is reached.
Operationally ready means usable now
The course requires road rescue equipment to be checked, serviced and made operationally
ready for use. This applies to the tools and support equipment that may be required for
vehicle access, stabilisation, protection and casualty removal.
A crew should not assume that equipment is ready simply because it is carried on the appliance.
Readiness depends on appropriate checking and disciplined preparation.
Equipment reliability supports rescue confidence
Rescue scenes may involve cutting equipment, hydraulic tools, lifting equipment, pneumatic
equipment, glass management equipment, hand tools, fire protection equipment and other
operational resources.
Each item has characteristics, limits and safe working capacity. Strong preparation ensures
the crew is thinking about both availability and suitability.
Check
Confirm equipment presence, condition and readiness.
Service
Maintain equipment in line with procedures and manufacturer guidance.
Prepare
Arrive knowing the rescue equipment can support the task.
Select Equipment Based on the Incident Information
Road rescue preparation is more than confirming that equipment works.
The crew must also consider which rescue equipment appears relevant to the known
incident information.
Selection begins with the reported scenario
The course requires rescue equipment to be selected based on incident information.
A reported single-car collision may create one equipment expectation, while a heavy vehicle,
motorcycle, bus or multi-vehicle incident may point toward different likely needs.
The aim is not to make final tactical decisions too early. Instead, the team prepares with
enough direction to reduce delay when the actual scene is assessed.
Suitability matters as much as availability
Equipment choice should reflect the likely rescue environment, the vehicle type, potential
casualty needs and anticipated hazards. This helps the team think beyond “what do we have?”
toward “what may safely help here?”
Good selection also respects equipment limitations. A tool may be powerful, yet still unsuitable
if the situation, access path or safety conditions demand another approach.
Equipment selection should be informed by the task, not by habit alone.
Select Personal Protective Clothing and Equipment
PPE selection is a direct operational decision. The course expects personal protective
clothing and equipment to be selected according to the nature of the rescue operation.
PPE should match the rescue environment
Road accident rescue can expose responders to traffic, sharp vehicle materials, glazing,
fluids, fuel, vehicle propulsion systems, supplementary restraint systems, difficult terrain,
adverse weather and after-dark conditions.
Because hazards vary, PPE choices should reflect the reported task and the risk picture
that is already forming before arrival.
Protection supports safer team performance
Personal protective clothing and equipment help responders work more safely around unstable,
damaged and potentially hazardous vehicles. The right protection helps teams maintain focus
on the rescue objective without overlooking their own safety.
Later in the operation, casualty PPE and shielding may also be needed. Part 2 establishes
the same principle for responders: think protection early.
Known hazards
Consider what the briefing and response information already indicate.
Scene conditions
Prepare for weather, darkness, traffic and environmental factors.
Vehicle risks
Keep glazing, fuels, power systems and restraint systems in mind.
Team safety
Protect responders so they can support the operation effectively.
Receive Further Incident Details While En Route
Rescue preparation continues during the response. New information may change the team’s
understanding of vehicles, casualties, hazards and the likely complexity of the scene.
Information can evolve quickly
The course states that further details on the nature of the rescue are received en route
in accordance with organisational procedures. This acknowledges the reality that the first
report may be incomplete or updated as more callers, agencies or communications become available.
A crew that remains receptive to new information can adapt its thinking before arrival.
En route updates should sharpen readiness
Additional details may alter expectations around the number of casualties, collision type,
vehicle position, responding agencies or environmental hazards. These updates should prompt
the team to refine its preparation, not become distracted.
Calm information handling is a professional rescue skill. It prevents assumptions from hardening
into unsafe decisions.
Updated information should improve readiness, not create panic or premature conclusions.
Discuss Anticipated Hazards and Risks as a Team
The final preparation step in Part 2 is shared hazard awareness.
Rescue team members are expected to discuss anticipated hazards and associated risks while en route.
Hazard discussion creates a shared mental model
Road rescue hazards may include traffic, bystanders, fuel, electrical systems, biohazards,
glazing, airbags, vehicle propulsion systems, adverse weather, terrain, animals, hazardous
materials and occupational stress.
Discussing these possibilities before arrival helps the team begin the scene assessment process
with sharper attention and stronger situational awareness.
Good crews talk before they act
Hazard discussion does not replace formal on-scene risk assessment. Instead, it prepares
rescuers to recognise concerns faster and communicate them more effectively once the scene
is in view.
This is where Part 2 connects directly to Part 3. The risks anticipated on approach become
the hazards assessed, controlled and monitored at the rescue scene.
Share what hazards may be present based on current information.
Connect each anticipated hazard to a likely risk or control priority.
Arrive ready to confirm, reject or refine those assumptions.
The RESCUE Cycle: Receive and Equip
Part 2 strengthens the first two steps of the undertake road accident rescue learning framework.
The crew must first Receive sound task information, then Equip
itself with the right operational readiness.
Receive
Receive briefing details, incident updates and rescue task direction.
Equip
Equip the crew through operational tools, suitable PPE and task-based readiness.
Secure
Part 3 will focus on securing the scene through assessment and hazard control.
Care
Manage casualties with hygiene, stabilisation and support to medical personnel.
Unlock
Create access and extrication pathways while protecting the casualty.
End Ready
Conclude the incident through scene preservation, recovery and readiness reset.
Part 2 focus: A rescue team that receives the right information and equips
itself properly arrives better prepared to manage scene safety.
Interactive Scenario Drill
Choose the strongest preparation response while the crew is still en route.
Scenario
Your crew is responding to a reported side-impact collision. Further radio information
suggests one casualty may be trapped, traffic remains active nearby and a hybrid vehicle
may be involved. What is the best preparation action?
Knowledge Quiz
Test the preparation and response principles before moving into rescue scene safety.
Question 1
Why is briefing information important before a road accident rescue response?
Question 2
What does operationally ready rescue equipment mean?
Question 3
How should PPE be selected?
Question 4
Why discuss anticipated hazards while en route?
60-Second Refresher Drill
Tick each statement once you can explain it clearly in your own words.
I can describe what makes rescue equipment operationally ready.
I can explain why PPE must suit the nature of the rescue task.
I can describe why en route hazard discussion supports safer arrival.
