Construction and field-service crew working on an active jobsite

CPR, AED & Emergency Response Training for Construction & Field-Service Teams

Practical CPR, AED, First Aid, and bleeding control training shaped around how construction, contractor, trade, installer, and field-service organizations actually operate — mobile workforces, multi-site crews, and tight project timelines.

  • On-site & jobsite training
  • Multi-location coordination
  • Flexible scheduling
  • OSHA-aligned curriculum

We Understand Construction & Field-Service Safety

Active jobsites, outdoor environments, remote work locations, mobile crews, geographically dispersed teams, and tight project timelines — we know what it takes to train construction, contractor, trade, installer, and field-service organizations without disrupting operations.

Workforce Training & Preparedness

Helping construction, contractor, trades, and field-service teams build the skills and confidence to respond to workplace emergencies — across crews, installers, and supervisors.

Multi-Site Safety Challenges

Supporting organizations operating across multiple offices, job sites, service routes, and field locations with consistent preparedness standards.

Emergency Response Readiness

Preparing mobile crews and field teams to respond effectively in the critical minutes before EMS arrives — severe bleeding, cardiac events, falls, and trauma.

Training & Preparedness Solutions for Construction & Field-Service Teams

The most common preparedness programs selected by general contractors, subcontractors, trades, installers, and field-service organizations operating across multiple sites and service areas.

CPR, AED & First Aid Training

Prepare workers, foremen, and supervisors to respond to the most common jobsite emergencies — cardiac events, falls, lacerations, and medical incidents that can occur on any active site.

Bleeding Control Training

Critical preparedness education for severe bleeding emergencies on active jobsites — where heavy equipment, power tools, and falls create scenarios in which immediate intervention may save a life.

Bloodborne Pathogens Training

Support worker safety and awareness when responding to incidents involving blood or bodily fluids — aligned with common OSHA expectations for at-risk roles.

Workplace Preparedness

Workplace Safety Preparedness Programs

Additional preparedness education supporting safer jobsite operations — built around the realities of multi-trade crews, rotating workforces, and active project sites.

AED Readiness for Construction & Field-Service Organizations

Owning an AED is only the first step. The harder question is whether it will be located, maintained, and accessible the day it's needed — across active projects, service trucks, fleet vehicles, remote properties, and changing crews.

Is Your Organization AED Ready When It's Needed Most?

Many organizations purchase AEDs with the best of intentions. Over time, equipment moves between projects, service trucks, temporary job trailers, and remote properties. Responsibility shifts between supervisors and crew leads. Inspections are forgotten. Pads expire. Batteries reach end-of-life. New construction projects wrap, renovation sites demobilize, landscaping crews rotate — and the AED that was once on site quietly disappears into a storage trailer or back office.

This is how AED programs fail quietly across construction and field-service organizations — long before anyone realizes the device may not be ready in an emergency.

An AED only provides value if it can be located, maintained, and accessed when needed. A ready AED is a managed AED — wherever your work takes it.

Questions Construction & Field-Service Organizations Commonly Ask

  • Which job sites, service routes, or field locations should have AEDs?
  • How many AEDs do we need across active projects and service areas?
  • How do we track AEDs as they move between projects, trailers, or fleet vehicles?
  • Who is responsible for monthly inspections in the field?
  • What happens to the AED when a project closes or a site is demobilized?
  • How do we manage AED programs across multiple locations and crews?

How We Help

Equipment & Planning

AED Sales

Sourcing and supply of AED units configured for the customer's environment and response model.

Equipment & Planning

AED Placement Assessments

Site-walk assessments to determine optimal AED placement based on response-time targets.

Make your AED program jobsite-ready

Pads, batteries, inspections, placement, location tracking, and ongoing oversight — handled by one trusted partner so your AEDs are ready the day they're needed, wherever your projects take you.

How we think

Building Safer Communities

Preparedness extends beyond a single company. The strongest safety cultures are built when everyone connected to a project — contractors, subcontractors, vendors, suppliers, property owners, facility managers, and service providers — understands expectations and works together toward safer jobsites.

Construction and field-service work rarely involves a single company. Contractors, subcontractors, trades, installers, vendors, suppliers, property owners, facility managers, and service providers all share a site — and all share responsibility for what happens on it.

Strong preparedness cultures are built when every party understands expectations, shares information, and works together toward safer outcomes. We help organizations lead that conversation across their projects, service areas, and partner networks.

Our goal is to help construction, contractor, and field-service organizations build cultures of safety, preparedness, and collaboration — across crews, trades, installers, and partners. Together, we are stronger.

Where this preparedness culture often extends

  • Active jobsites and project sites
  • Field offices, trailers, and warehouses
  • Service trucks and fleet vehicles
  • Subcontractor and installer crews
  • Vendor and supplier partners
  • Property owner and facility management teams
  • Multi-site AED program coordination

Project & service ecosystem

  1. General Contractors & Contractors
  2. Subcontractors & Trades
  3. Installers & Service Providers
  4. Vendors & Suppliers
  5. Property Owners & Facility Managers

Resources & Preparedness Education

A growing library of downloads, preparedness guidance, industry standards education, and answers to common misconceptions — built to help construction, contractor, trade, installer, and field-service organizations strengthen readiness beyond the classroom.

Downloadable Resources

Checklists, Forms & Planning Tools

Request Resource

AED Inspection Form

Monthly inspection log for jobsite AED owners — pads, battery, accessibility, signage, and location tracking.

Request Resource

Jobsite Emergency Response Checklist

Quick reference for crews and supervisors covering immediate response steps for common jobsite emergencies.

Coming Soon

AED Readiness Worksheet

Plan AED placement, responsibility assignments, and tracking across multiple active projects.

Coming Soon

Bleeding Control Planning Checklist

Considerations for kits, placement, training, and high-risk task readiness on active jobsites.

Preparedness Guidance

Educational Guidance for Construction & Field-Service Organizations

Educational preparedness topics frequently relevant to construction, contractor, trade, installer, and field-service organizations — and the workforces they support.

Jobsite & field-service emergency planning

Educational guidance for building emergency response plans tailored to active construction sites, service routes, multi-trade crews, and changing site conditions.

Remote worksite response

Considerations for crews and installers operating in remote or distant locations where EMS response times may be extended and self-sufficiency matters most.

Severe bleeding preparedness

Educational considerations for bleeding-control kits, placement, and team training in environments with heavy equipment, power tools, fall hazards, and sharp-tool exposure.

AED accessibility planning

Guidance on AED placement, visibility, signage, and mobility between trailers, service trucks, and field locations so a device can be reached quickly when seconds matter.

Industry Standards & Preparedness Considerations

Understanding Common Preparedness Expectations

Educational guidance — not legal or regulatory advice. Organizations should always verify requirements with their employer, insurer, general contractor, OSHA compliance advisor, or governing authority.

OSHA first aid preparedness considerations

OSHA generally expects employers to ensure that first aid and emergency response capability is reasonably available — particularly when emergency medical services are not in near proximity to the worksite. Employers should verify specific obligations with their compliance or legal counsel.

Emergency response planning considerations

Many construction, contractor, and field-service organizations are encouraged to maintain documented emergency response plans, trained personnel, and equipment appropriate to the hazards present on each site.

Workplace AED planning considerations

Workplace AED programs are often guided by employer policy, insurer expectations, and safety leadership rather than a single regulation. Organizations frequently choose to deploy AEDs at large sites, high-headcount projects, fleet operations, and remote locations.

Training standards vs. certification brands

Many organizations assume a specific certification provider is required. In reality, expectations typically focus on training standards and preparedness outcomes — not a single brand. Always verify requirements with your employer, insurer, GC, or governing authority.

Common Misconceptions

Clearing Up Common Preparedness Misunderstandings

Why Organizations Choose ICERTCPR

Construction, contractor, trade, installer, and field-service organizations partner with us for long-term emergency preparedness — not just a single class. We help build training programs, AED readiness, and cultures of safety that scale with your projects and service operations.

Over 15 years supporting construction & field-service organizations

We've worked alongside contractors, trades, installers, and field-service teams of every size — from single-crew operators to multi-region general contractors.

Experience with major contractors

We've supported organizations including Verdex, Dowbuilt, Robins & Morton, Kast Construction, and many other construction, contractor, and field-service organizations served over the years.

We understand field operations

Active jobsites, service routes, shifting crews, weather days, and tight project timelines — we plan training around the realities of construction and field work, not against them.

Multi-location training capability

We coordinate training across regions, project sites, service areas, and field offices so your organization gets consistent preparedness wherever you operate.

Flexible scheduling for active projects

Early-morning, evening, weekend, and split-session classes designed to minimize downtime and respect project schedules and service-route demands.

Built for large, diverse workforces

We support organizations training hundreds of workers across multiple trades, languages, installer crews, and subcontractor partnerships — with the operational capacity to back it up.

Construction & Field-Service Training FAQ

Common questions from safety directors, project managers, field supervisors, service managers, and operations leaders.

Ready to prepare your construction & field-service teams?

Book on-site training, request a multi-site quote, or talk with an advisor who understands construction, contractor, and field-service operations.