First Aid on Film and TV Sets: A Guide for Toronto Productions
Toronto is one of North America’s busiest production hubs. Behind the cameras, a film set is a sprawling, high-hazard workplace — and being ready for an emergency is part of every shoot.
Toronto’s film and television industry is enormous — soundstages, location shoots across the GTA, and crews of dozens or hundreds working long days under intense pressure. It’s an exciting environment, but it’s also a workplace full of genuine hazards: heavy rigging, electrical gear, heights, stunts, special effects, vehicles, and the simple risk that comes with fatigue after a 12-hour day.
This guide is for producers, production managers, unit managers, and crew who want to understand on-set first aid: the hazards, the role of a set medic, the value of certified crew, and how to build emergency readiness into a production.
Why Film Sets Are a Distinct First Aid Environment
A few features make production work different from a typical office or store:
- Long, intense hours. Twelve-plus hour days and night shoots cause fatigue, which drives accidents — slips, missteps, and lapses in attention.
- Heavy equipment everywhere. Grip, lighting, and camera gear, rigging, dollies, and cranes create crush, strike, and falling-object risks.
- Electrical and power hazards. Extensive cabling, generators, and lighting carry electrical and trip risks.
- Working at heights. Scaffolding, rigging points, and elevated platforms mean fall risks.
- Stunts, SFX, and pyrotechnics. Controlled but real hazards — fire, firearms (prop or otherwise), vehicles, and physical action.
- Location shooting. Remote or access-controlled sites can delay paramedics, making on-site response even more critical.
- Catering and craft services. Allergy and choking risks come with feeding a large crew.
- Weather extremes. Heat illness in summer, cold injuries in winter, during long outdoor shoots.
The Set Medic and the Trained Crew
On most professional productions, a set medic (first aid attendant) provides dedicated medical coverage — running the first aid station, responding to injuries and illness, and advising on safety during higher-risk scenes. They are an essential part of a safe production.
But here’s the reality: a film set is huge and spread out. The medic might be at base camp while an incident happens three blocks away on a location shoot, or up on a different floor of a soundstage. The person nearest an emergency is often a regular crew member. That’s why having many crew certified in first aid and CPR matters — it means qualified help can start immediately, anywhere on set, while the medic and paramedics are summoned.
Common On-Set Emergencies
Cardiac arrest
Long hours, stress, and crews that include older professionals mean cardiac events happen. A collapsed, unresponsive person who isn’t breathing normally needs immediate CPR and an AED. Productions should know where the nearest AED is and have crew who can use it — see our AED guide.
Falls and fractures
From heights, off equipment, or over the endless cables underfoot. Keep the person still if a head, neck, or back injury is possible, control bleeding, support suspected fractures, and call for help.
Cuts and crush injuries
Grip and construction work, blades, and heavy gear cause lacerations and crush injuries. Apply firm direct pressure to bleeding and arrange medical care for serious wounds — see our wound care guide.
Burns
Hot lights, electrical faults, pyrotechnics, and SFX can cause burns. Cool with running water for at least 20 minutes, cover loosely, and seek care for anything beyond minor — see our burn safety guide.
Heat and cold
Outdoor shoots run in all conditions. Watch for heat exhaustion and heat stroke in summer and cold-related injury in winter; build in breaks, hydration, and warming or cooling areas.
Allergic reactions and choking
Feeding a large crew brings allergy and choking risks. Crew should recognize anaphylaxis and know choking response — see our anaphylaxis guide.
Building Emergency Readiness Into a Production
1Cover it in the safety meeting
Start shoots — especially stunt or SFX days — with a safety briefing that includes the location of first aid stations and AEDs, who the medic and trained first aiders are, and the emergency procedure.
2Know your exact location and access
For every shooting location, document the precise address and the best access route for an ambulance — including gate codes, security contacts, and where to direct paramedics. On remote sites, plan for longer response times.
3Provide kits, AEDs, and a medic appropriate to the risk
Scale first aid resources to the size and hazard level of the production. Higher-risk days warrant enhanced coverage.
4Certify your key crew
Train department heads, ADs, and others spread across the set in first aid and CPR, so qualified responders are distributed everywhere people are working.
Train Your Crew in Toronto
Whether you’re a production company building a safety culture or a crew member who wants to be ready (and more employable), certified first aid and CPR is a smart investment. A Life Safe first aid and CPR course delivers hands-on training for the emergencies sets actually see, and our on-site training can certify crew at your studio or production office across Toronto and the GTA.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do film and TV sets need first aid coverage?
Yes. A set is a workplace, so in Ontario it falls under occupational health and safety first aid requirements based on the number of workers — kits and trained first aiders must be provided. Larger or higher-risk productions (stunts, SFX, heights, vehicles) typically also engage a dedicated set medic, and many crew benefit from holding their own certification.
What are the main hazards on a film set?
Long shifts causing fatigue, heavy rigging and grip equipment, electrical gear and generators, working at heights, stunts and special effects, pyrotechnics, vehicles, extreme weather on location, trip hazards from cables, and catering allergy and choking risks. Remote or access-controlled locations can also delay paramedics, raising the importance of on-site readiness.
What is a set medic?
A set medic (first aid attendant) is a trained professional engaged by a production to provide on-set medical coverage, run the first aid station, respond to injuries and illness, and advise on safety during higher-risk scenes. While the medic handles serious response, having many crew trained in basic first aid and CPR means help can start instantly anywhere on a large set.
Should film crew members get first aid certified?
Highly valuable. Sets are large and crew are spread out, so the person nearest an emergency may not be the medic. A crew member with first aid and CPR training can respond immediately to a collapse, cut, burn, or fall while the medic and paramedics are summoned. Certification also makes crew more employable and strengthens set safety culture.
Keep Your Production Safe From Call Time to Wrap
A film set rewards crew who can act fast when something goes wrong. Life Safe’s hands-on first aid, CPR, and AED courses train your team for real on-set emergencies — and we’ll come to your Toronto studio or production office for group certification.
Find a class near you: Toronto • Downtown Toronto • East York • Hamilton • Welland • Guelph
