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Road Guardians supports Accident Scene Management (ASM) training, with the core goal of reducing motorcycle rider injuries and fatalities through first-response education. The text indicates that ASM is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization founded in 1996. It says it has trained more than 50,000 students, operates across 36 U.S. states, and has instructors in South Africa, Australia, the Philippines, and the United States. It is a vertical organization focused on motorcycle trauma training.
ASM courses are not standard CPR or basic first aid classes. Instead, they are built around motorcycle crash scenarios, covering topics such as distinguishing trauma from medical conditions, jaw-thrust rescue breathing, helmet removal, traffic control, and moving injured riders. Courses are divided into Basic and Advanced levels. Certification is valid for 2 years, with a 6-month grace period. The organization is CAPCE accredited. In the U.S., Lead Instructors must have EMT-level or higher medical training, be motorcycle riders, and complete 24 hours of training. Level Two instructors may assist with teaching but cannot teach classes independently.
Road Guardians membership costs $25 per year and supports safety information, outreach, and training. The base fee for hosting a group course is $1,500, including the instructor, travel, and materials. The store also sells certificates, manuals, ebooks, patches, and safety items, such as ASM certificates for $8 and manuals/ebooks for around $8–12. However, the captured text does not disclose the per-person registration fee for regular public courses, specific class duration, or a full course syllabus, so pricing transparency is only average. Delivery formats include in-person courses, online courses, group-hosted courses, and instructor training. Instructor training is mostly completed through online courses and Skype, but trainees must still attend one class.
Its main strength is its highly specific scenario focus, filling a gap left by general first aid courses when it comes to motorcycle trauma response. Its nonprofit status, CAPCE accreditation, long history, and instructor network also strengthen its credibility. The drawbacks are that its resources are clearly U.S.-centered, and in-person accessibility depends on local instructors. Certification must be renewed regularly; even those with existing medical backgrounds cannot skip the Basic course; and the pages do not clearly specify teaching languages or payment methods.
It is best suited to U.S. motorcycle riders, riding organizations such as HOG, event organizers, bystanders who may provide aid at crash scenes, and rescue personnel who want to strengthen their motorcycle-trauma response skills. Chinese users may find its concepts and online resources useful, but offline certification, the instructor network, and language support are unclear, making actual participation relatively difficult. The text does not provide enough information to determine its accessibility from China.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on roadguardians.org official site.
roadguardians.org is an United States Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach roadguardians.org directly.