Chemical Immobilization

Chemical Capture and Immobilization

Course Description

This 16 hour course explores the core areas required to successfully perform chemical capture and immobilization in the field of animal control. Topics include the history of chemical immobilization, operational planning, safety considerations, pharmacology, post-capture procedures, and capture-related emergencies.

This course meets the training requirements for all states including Florida’s requirement per F.S.S. 828.27.

Course Topics

Training Block A: Fundamental of Chemical Immobilization

History and evolution of chemical immobilization
Chemical immobilization equipment
High-liability considerations for chemical immobilization operations

Training Block B: Animal Knowledge

Topographical anatomy
Physiological responses to stress
Proper target areas

Training Block C: Pharmacology

Drug classifications
Commonly used drugs for chemical immobilization
Dosage calculation and using dosage charts

Training Block D:  Conducting Chemical Immobilization Operations

Planning and safety considerations
Post-capture procedures
Capture-related emergencies

Training Block E: Marksmanship and Qualifications

Projector familiarization and safety
Marksmanship training and qualification
Scenario-based training and evaluations

Course Prerequisites

This course is restricted to law enforcement and animal care and control professionals who are employed by a municipal, county, state, or federal agency that is authorized to conduct chemical capture and immobilization operations as part of their regular duties.

Completion Standards

Students must attend all 16 hours of the course, demonstrate proficiency in safety and marksmanship, and pass a comprehensive written examination with a score of 75% or better.

Certifications

Students who successfully pass this course will receive certification in: CHEMICAL IMMOBILIZATION: DOMESTIC ANIMALS

Training Credits and Limitations

This course satisfies the 16-hour training requirement of the Tactical Animal Control Officer Certification course’s Chemical Immobilization Training Block, which also applies to the 110-hour AACIS certified Animal Control Officer certification course.

 

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