First-Aid Kit Essentials

Chrisc321

NAXJA Forum User
Location
Las Vegas, NV
The weather is finally showing signs of cooling off here in Vegas, and that means it is time to wheel!!! I am putting together a first-aid kit to keep in the jeep. I have all the usual suspects...gauze, neosporin, pain relievers, ace bandages, etc. What are some things that not everyone thinks about that are good to have in a kit? Anyone, Anyone?? Bueller, Bueller?? :)
 
Cat tourniquet: learn how to use one first. cat tourniquets are great can be applied one handed
CPR Mask: go take a CPR class
cravat bandage: Can be used for splints or bandages or tourniquets
Israeli bandage: these things are amazing
Medical shears
Antiseptic wipes
Alcohol wipes
Iodine wipes
Medical tape
ice pack
ibuprofen: more for the anti-inflammatory purpose then pain killer
snake bite kit

Hemcon: pricey but might save your life. also something you need to know how to use.
 
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Other than the regular kit stuff,

I carry the bandages you soak in water to make a cast for imobilizing.
A bottle of superglue
A tube of liquid skin
A few Kotex for bandages
Eye wash
Instant cold packs
Adolphs Meat tenderizer for stings and bites
Benedryl
Sugar tablets
A spare glucosometer
toilet paper
hand sanitizer
topical novacaine
Duct tape
fire starter
hemostats
a suture kit
growing up and wheeling in TX I carried an antivenom kit
 
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tourniquet: learn how to use one first.
CPR Mask: go take a CPR class
cravat bandage
Israeli bandage
Medical shears
Antiseptic wipes
Alcohol wipes
Iodine wipes
Medical tape
ice pack
ibuprofen: more for the anti-inflammatory purpose then pain killer

I carry the bandages you soak in water to make a cast for imobilizing.
A bottle of superglue
A tube of liquid skin
A few Kotex for bandages
Eye wash
Instant cold packs
Adolphs Meat tenderizer for stings and bites
Benedryl
Sugar tablets
A spare glucosometer
toilet paper
hand sanitizer
topical novacaine
Duct tape
fire starter
hemostats
a suture kit
growing up and wheeling in TX I carried an antivenom kit

Both good lists, but the first thing two things that were left off:
1. Get some training, even if it's the most basic first aid class you can find. Training is worth it's weight in gold.
2. ALWAYS wear surgical gloves, even if it's your own family member. If the thought of a communicable disease doesn't scare you enough, the thought of possible contaminating someone's wound and causing a deadly infection should.
 
Ahh yes gloves... Doh.

I mentioned training a couple times lol
 
Sorry, I'm and ex EMT. I carry a lot of stuff most people shouldn't even think of like IV supplies.

If you can't get to some classes for training, there are several good books out there that would be handy to be able to have access to in an emergency.
 
spare 1911 mag (loaded), a couple of cotton balls, and a cigarette.


Don't forget a tampon or 2.

rotate your mags so they don't sit loaded for long.
 
Reliable communication to outside help
 
One thing you rarely hear about and I'm kind of surpirsed, is a body bag. The old military style have six handles, can be turned into a stretcher pretty easy (add a couple of poles), rolls up as small as a thin blanket. A blanket inside or even a foil emergency blanket and it will double as a sleeping bag and keep you surprisingly toasty well below freezing. You can double it over and make a dandy back pack, with a couple of short straps (I usually have a 100 feet of parachute cord around). It will double as a duffel bag.
Two varieties, one is just material, but tightly woven synthetic (military body bag), military grade nylon. the other is a human remains bag and has a liquid barrier.
I use mine with a blanket liner, instead of a sleeping bag when hunting in a high seat, when it's really cold out. Then use it to carry my game out.
I've had a couple for over thirty years, washed them a hundred times and they are still serviceable. The old military grade are made to last.
My take on first aid kits is I buy in bulk. The medium kit (not too big and not too small) and scatter them everywhere. Every Jeep has two or three, a few in the house and a few in the shop. Then I buy some more. If I need one I want to find it quick and not have to hunt for it.
 
And when your done trying to act hard core you can just use a sleeping bag.
 
I know this has been mentioned before, and I usually get berated for stating the perfectly bloody obvious, but I see no reason to stop - take a First Aid course!

Once you know what you're doing, you have a better idea of what to take. Also, you can do a lot more with a lot less, once you know what to do!

Splints can be made from readily-available materials - I've even used newspapers and magazines.

I keep several issue web belts (pants belts, not pistol belts) or Nylon straps with tri-glide buckles in my kits - they do come in handy, and they're not "one-trick ponies."

My First Aid kit also doubles as a survival kit, so I have some odd things in there. A bunch of 30-minute flares (useful for signalling and starting fires.) A largish (three-foot square) sheet of heavy clear plastic, rolled up in an old #10 can (can you say "solar still?" I knew you could. You can collect water from the unlikeliest places using that - even distilling it from the ground itself in temperate areas. Throw leaves in there. Kill an animal, eat the flesh, and bleed it out into the hole. Urinate in the hole. Any liquid you put in there, or solid with a significant water content - will yield distilled water.) There's also an eight-foot bit of 1/4" rubber hose that I trail into the can from under, so I don't have to lift the plastic to drink. At least two issue signal mirrors - packed in separate locations (usually, one in the kit and one in the glove box.) A copy of The Boy Scout Handbook - for a refresher for the things I've forgotten. A two-foot long aluminum rod is usually handy - useful for making a Sun Compass. Lifeboat matches, and lifeboat food bars (they can carry you while you find something else to eat.)

I need to get another set of VS-17 signal panels - I lost mine somehow. You can find them on eBay. Coupled with a signal mirror, a very effective way to let people know where you are.

An old T-10 reserve canopy. It's big enough for me to make a tent and curl up in to stay warm.

At least one good folding knife and one good fixed-blade knife.

At least one good folding shovel - and a fixed shovel, if you have room.

A good crowbar - min. three feet long (you'd be amazed at how handy a good long lever can be...)

Min. 100 feet of "550" parachute shroud line. Useful for many things.

Remove the core from a roll of duct tape, so you can store it flat. You'll still be able to use most of it, and it can come in very handy.

A First Aid kit shouldn't be limited to first aid only - it can be so much more...
 
And when your done trying to act hard core you can just use a sleeping bag.
Trying to carry somebody out in a sleeping bag, may be difficult. I favor multi use items to carry around with me, something that can be rolled to about the size of a shaving kit. Sleeping bags take up a lot of room.
Act hard core? I've probably spent more time living in the elements than you have on the planet. More time in the chow line than you have in the military. I was born before television and was old when Windows was new. lol

Noticed 5-90 mention signal panels, my survival blanket is day glow orange on one side, my pocket flare pen starts a fire right quick. Treating for shock (keeping someone warm) and setting up an LZ are all part of the process.
 
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Trying to carry somebody out in a sleeping bag, may be difficult. I favor multi use items to carry around with me, something that can be rolled to about the size of a shaving kit. Sleeping bags take up a lot of room.
Act hard core? I've probably spent more time living in the elements than you have on the planet. More time in the chow line than you have in the military. I was born before television and was old when Windows was new. lol

Noticed 5-90 mention signal panels, my survival blanket is day glow orange on one side, my pocket flare pen starts a fire right quick. Treating for shock (keeping someone warm) and setting up an LZ are all part of the process.

Gawd, you sound like me (I've not been around as long, but my experience has been greatly compressed.)

Although, according to my kid sister, I've been around since the Earth cooled and the dinosaurs called it quits. Feels like it sometimes (OK - most of the damned time!) as well.

I didn't get a reversible "signal" blanket, and the VS-17s can be staked out and used to leave various meanings of signal anyhow ("I am heading in this direction." "Medical help required." "Land here - LZ set." &c.) That's why I favour them instead of using a blanket. That, and it frees up the blanket for the more prosaic use of keeping warm at night (or keeping shock vics warm, which can be more useful. Keep warm, elevate feet, monitor colour. Easy for a shock vic to go hypoxic, then anoxic, then cyanotic - if they make it to anoxic, you've probably already lost them.)

Considering I've also got to take care of an emphysemic, my "in-town" emergency kit also includes an "E" size bottle of O2, a regulator, and a nasal cannula. I usually have a pulse oximeter in my pocket, and a stethoscope (a good one, not a five-dollar drugstore one...) and some other specialised goodies as well. And training from the pulmonologist and cardiologist in what to look out for and listen for (which built on old SCUBA/PADI and high-altitude skydiving/flight training anyhow.)

Which goes to show that you must tailor your kit according to anticipated needs. Gotta deal with allergies? Get a scrip for epipens, and keep a few handy (rotate stock.) Known to dehydrate? Disinfect some containers and water, and keep plenty handy. (I have two 10-litre jugs that are always full, and get changed semiannually.)

A gallon or two of fuel won't go amiss - rotate quarterly (it can get you back to civilisation, or help you get a good fire going.)

Peroxide won't go bad, can be used to disinfect wounds, and makes an effective mouth rinse when mixed 1:1 with water. If you can't brush your teeth, this is the next best thing (which is why I have no dental work, even with everything I've put my teeth through. Milk-Bones aren't a bad idea to keep around either - they clean your teeth well, and one or two can stave off hunger pangs for a couple of hours or so.)

A small bottle of chlorine bleach - amber or opaque bottle, keep it as cool and shaded as possible - can be used to disinfect water. Five drops to the gallon, shake well, and let sit for one hour (covered) and one more hour (open.) Or, get iodine tabs at the Army/Navy store (they keep better anyhow.)

If you can't get "lifeboat" matches locally, get "Blue Tip" (strike anywhere) matches and dip 2/3-way in paraffin, starting with the head. Gently scrape the paraffin off with a fingernail before striking. The paraffin waterproofs the head, and will help the match stay burning so you can light your fire.

Whatever you pay for a Boy Scout Handbook isn't enough. If you weren't in Scouts, this will still give you just about all of the essential survival information you could ever need, as well as plenty of First Aid. Firebuilding, knots & cordage, and the like are also covered (you don't need to know every knot in the BSH, but you should know at least a few - square, overhand, figure-eight, clove hitch, bowline, sheet bend are what I'd consider a minimum. Practise until you can tie them hanging upside down, behind your back, in the dark, under water. Correctly. Overhand and figure-eight can be modified to produce a slipknot; the bowline can be used to make a loop that won't slip, the sheet bend can be used to join ropes, and the clove hitch is the most basic "standing hitch" used to secure a rope to a post, tree, or whatever.)

Training: First Aid/CPR is a bare minimum. I've trained up to First Responder and BLS as part of jobs I've had, so I'm a bit farther ahead than most (I can do triage, in a pinch. And limited surgical operations - like a tracheostomy. My sutures aren't pretty, but they'll stop you from bleeding.) Orienteering is necessary to survival (have a good map and a compass, and know how to use them. GPS batteries go flat, maps and compasses don't use batteries. Suggest also a pace counter, and know how many paces of yours go into 100 metres. For me, it's 67.

(This allows me to figure my location on a map with a CEP of about 1/2-metre. Most GPS units do CEP of 5 metres at best. I can use a GPS, I just prefer not to.)

And know how to read any map - they're really not all that difficult. You can have trail maps and road maps, but I will suggest a survey quad for wherever you go - it will give you more useful information than anything else out there. They're available for the entire United States from the United States Geological Survey, and you probably have a branch local to you (mine's about thirty miles away in Menlo Park, but they cover CA/WA/OR/NV/AZ/AK/HI in stock, and can order anything else to ship to my house.)

Where did I learn survival? I've got one uncle that did two tours in the Big Asian Vacation with the Marines (working forward,) and another that did three tours with USMC LRRP. I learned hunting, survival, and the beginnings of self defence from them (the latter I supplemented with training in Judo, Aikido, and Dragon style Wing Chun...) and never forgot the lessons. The more I'd go camping with them, the less gear I took (the rule was "If you want it, you carry it. If it's too heavy, you don't want it badly enough.")

I'm sure I'm not as o-l-d:gag: as 8mud, but I'm probably close in experience by dint of starting earlier. Unless there's something he's not telling us...:cheers:
 
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