Chris Suprun is an author, actor, and citizen who is best known for his role in the 2016 Electoral College.
He has worked with at-risk communities since he was a teenager helping people develop resilience and create the tools to overcome adversity and challenge.
In the past two decades he has spoken to tens of thousands in university lecture halls, professional coaching clinics, and conferences.
Suprun has appeared in local and national newspapers. His opeds appear in the New York Times, Houston Chronicle, and US News and World Report.
He has also appeared on CNN, FOX, MSNBC, syndicated and national radio programs, and many others.
Professionally, he is a critical care paramedic and educator and a founding board member of The September 11 Foundation. There he has spoken to more than twenty thousand students since 9/11. His focus is on developing resilience and using lessons from 9/11 to overcome adversity and challenge.
His total public safety career as a paramedic/firefighter has spanned more than three decades including time as a volunteer firefighter.
He is former Chairman of the EMS for Children National Center Advisory Council.
Suprun has also served appointments as Adjunct Faculty for EMS at Dallas College. He served as Adjunct Instructor in Emergency Medicine for The George Washington University.
He has taught on a wide variety of subjects for public safety agencies across the spectrum. Agencies include regional hospitals, federal law enforcement, Fortune 500 firms, and foreign governments. His Google Scholar profile includes some of his published peer reviewed medical articles.
Suprun is a member of the National Association of EMS Educators and National Association of EMTs.
He is also a Peer Reviewer for the International Journal of Paramedicine.