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In this episode I sit down with Blake Richardson, CEO of EaseAlert and the son of a 22 year firefighter to explore what may be one of the next frontiers in firefighter health and safety: how we alert crews to calls.
For generations the fire service has relied on loud bells, tones and lights to mobilise stations. It works, but it was designed to wake an entire building rather than the specific firefighters who are actually responding. EaseAlert is approaching this differently, using wearable tactile alerting and integrated station technology to notify responders directly. The goal is simple but powerful: wake firefighters effectively without triggering the extreme startle response that traditional alarm systems can create.
In our conversation we dig into the science behind alerting, including sleep disruption, stress responses and the cumulative physiological impact alarms may have across a firefighter’s career. Early research comparing tactile alerting with traditional audible systems has shown a 38.3 percent reduction in heart rate spike during the first 30 seconds after an alert when firefighters used the EaseAlert system. As cardiovascular events and sleep related health challenges remain major concerns in our profession, this episode explores whether the future of firefighter alerting lies not in waking the entire station, but in responding the firefighter themselves.
You can also download the DATA about EASE ALERT research HERE
EASE alert website HERE
Email Blake at - [email protected]
Access all episodes, documents, GIVEAWAYS & debriefs HERE
Join me at Blue Light Show in London in July
Podcast Apparel, Hoodies, Flags, Mugs HERE
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***The views expressed in this episode are those of the individual speakers. Our partners are not responsible for the content of this episode and does not warrant its accuracy or completeness.***
Please support the podcast and its future by clicking HERE and joining our Patreon Crew
By Pete Wakefield5
33 ratings
In this episode I sit down with Blake Richardson, CEO of EaseAlert and the son of a 22 year firefighter to explore what may be one of the next frontiers in firefighter health and safety: how we alert crews to calls.
For generations the fire service has relied on loud bells, tones and lights to mobilise stations. It works, but it was designed to wake an entire building rather than the specific firefighters who are actually responding. EaseAlert is approaching this differently, using wearable tactile alerting and integrated station technology to notify responders directly. The goal is simple but powerful: wake firefighters effectively without triggering the extreme startle response that traditional alarm systems can create.
In our conversation we dig into the science behind alerting, including sleep disruption, stress responses and the cumulative physiological impact alarms may have across a firefighter’s career. Early research comparing tactile alerting with traditional audible systems has shown a 38.3 percent reduction in heart rate spike during the first 30 seconds after an alert when firefighters used the EaseAlert system. As cardiovascular events and sleep related health challenges remain major concerns in our profession, this episode explores whether the future of firefighter alerting lies not in waking the entire station, but in responding the firefighter themselves.
You can also download the DATA about EASE ALERT research HERE
EASE alert website HERE
Email Blake at - [email protected]
Access all episodes, documents, GIVEAWAYS & debriefs HERE
Join me at Blue Light Show in London in July
Podcast Apparel, Hoodies, Flags, Mugs HERE
our partners supporting this episode.
Send a text
Support the show
***The views expressed in this episode are those of the individual speakers. Our partners are not responsible for the content of this episode and does not warrant its accuracy or completeness.***
Please support the podcast and its future by clicking HERE and joining our Patreon Crew

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