About me
I am a registered nurse with a specialization in anaesthesia, resuscitation, and emergency medicine, holding a Master’s degree in Management of Healthcare and Social Services.
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In addition, I have completed multiple certifications in crisis and emergency management and work as an accredited instructor in civilian and tactical medical training.
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My professional background combines clinical practice, pre-hospital emergency care, and structured adult education. I do not teach theory in isolation—my work is grounded in real-world application, clear decision-making, and performance under pressure.
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Why Attend My Courses
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My courses are designed to build true operational competence, not just theoretical knowledge.
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Strong focus on hands-on training and repetition
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Skills that remain effective under stress and time pressure
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Integration of medical standards with tactical applicability
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Clear, structured teaching without unnecessary complexity
Participants leave my courses able to act decisively, not just describe what should be done.
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Tactical Training as Added Value
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Through continuous tactical training and my active involvement as a sports shooter, I have developed a deep understanding of:
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Movement and performance under physical and cognitive stress
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Equipment behavior in dynamic environments
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Ergonomics, accessibility, and gear placement
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Practical requirements beyond laboratory or theoretical testing
This perspective is essential to realistically combine medical care with tactical realities.
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Equipment Development
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I design tactical equipment from the perspective of someone who uses, tests, and critically evaluates it in practice.
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My products are based on:
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medical expertise
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tactical application experience
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active shooting sports
Design decisions are driven by functionality, durability, and efficiency, not trends.
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My Approach
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For me, training and equipment serve the same purpose: enabling people to perform effectively in critical situations. Equipment must support the user under stress, not require adaptation or compromise. The responsibility lies with the design—the equipment must adapt to the user, not the other way around.
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Practical. Realistic. Reliable.


