Walk into an SIEHS RDE (Research, Development, and Education) session, and you’ll see emergency training at its best. This isn’t about lectures or textbook drills. SIEHS emergency training and research focus on hands-on, fast-paced learning grounded in real-world scenarios.
Instructors run mock roadside trauma scenes in the morning and CPR drills for corporate teams by afternoon. As one trainer puts it:
“You can’t just hand someone a manual and expect them to perform under pressure. You have to train like it’s real because someday, it will be.”
Whether it’s first aid for school staff or advanced training for EMTs, participants take it seriously. SIEHS RDE instructors understand what’s at stake—many have lived it. That’s why companies like Shell Pakistan and PARCO trust RDE for workforce training. It’s not about ticking boxes. It’s about preparing for the moment when knowledge saves a life.
RDE recently set up a dedicated Research Department—not to publish papers for the sake of it, but to answer real-world questions. Why do response times vary between urban and rural areas? How do call center protocols affect emergency response?
The team explores these issues through field data, interviews, and collaborations. SIEHS frontline staff join in, reviewing SOPs, leading small studies, and helping shape policies. The goal: embed research into the heart of emergency operations.
Since its start, RDE has trained over 395 EMTs across 15 induction batches in Sindh. Specialized ventilator training—like on the O-Two e700—is tested and refined across operational zones.
Every week brings coaching sessions with tele-physicians, updates to ambulance guidebooks, and refinements to life-saving checklists. Even small improvements matter—because in emergency care, the details can save lives.
RDE also understands the power of communication. Recently, they worked with a freelance photographer to improve public-facing materials, showing that visibility is as important as clinical precision.
What started as the Clinical Training Department has evolved into RDE—a bold initiative that combines training, research, and education. But the mission remains the same: prepare people to act under pressure, take control in chaos, and save lives.
Remember, emergency care offers no second chances. Thanks to SIEHS emergency training and research, more people in Sindh are ready when it counts.
👉 For health emergencies, call 1122. For free medical consultations, call 1123. Both are available 24/7.