Advent Resource Management

About Our Company

General Information

We are here to help empower companies to respond with precision in the event of a medical emergency. Being an EMT and a survivor of 4 heart attacks himself, our CEO Dan Greninger has both the medical background and the personal connection necessary to spearhead our operations. We are a premiere company with a vast range of clients. Our dedication to our customers has provided us with long term relationships with countless companies all over the US. Many of who have been with us for 20+ years. A list of some of our clients are available to you upon request.

Executive Team

Dan Greninger, CEO / President - Owner and founder of Advent Resource Management. Dan is a Texas State Certified Emergency Medical Technician with over 28 years experience in the fields of safety and health. He has established successful safety training programs for companies across the United States and has spearheaded the growth / development of Advent for the last 20 years.

Dina Nall, Manager of Operations who brings an enthusiasm to training and service that is unsurpassed in the field.

or call 713-812-8123

The Proof is in the Pudding

From: john_jarrell@harcourt.com [mailto:john_jarrell@harcourt.com]
Sent: Wednesday, May 04, 2005 10:07 AM
To: dangren@adventresource.com

Subject: Proof of the Pudding

Dan,

We had a real-world AED response this morning. Full arrest; no respiration, no pulse. We got the kit to the patient in about 2 minutes, hooked him up, and started shocks per the prompts. The second shock and a little CPR got him breathing again. The first trace was a classic fibrillation line. Totally disorganized and barely registering. We could see change after the first shock and the difference that the shock made.

What the instructors say is precisely true: just because the patient's heart and breathing restart doesn't mean you're home free. His heart stopped at least two more times, which required multiple shocks. Fortunately, once the heart was restarted each time he seemed to start breathing spontaneously.

The SAFD arrived in about 10 minutes and the EMS unit about 5 minutes after that. It took EMS about 10 more minutes to get him stable enough to transport. The clean-up fireman that gave us a little critique, which was favorable, after EMS departed. When he left, the patient had a full sinus rhythm, respiration, and acceptable bp. Full credit goes to the AED. Without it, given the time elapsed for EMS response and as verified by the fireman, the patient would have died.

We do need a little replenishment:

Recharge of O2 for the control room tank (we used about 1/2) Mask for the control room tank Mask for the southeast post tank - we had to use a little O2 there a bit ago and I hadn't gotten around to making the request. Set of pads for the control room AED.

I know this will be an extra cost item, but we need another data card for the control room. As is SOP, EMS took our card with them. If you could give me the cost, I'll start work on the req.

That's it. I believe I'm safe in saying that today, the program and the kits paid for themselves.

John A. Jarrell Jr.
Safety & Security Manager
Harcourt Assessment, Inc.
19500 Bulverde Rd.
San Antonio, TX 78259