Re: med kits
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: DP425</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: jabronie</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: DP425</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: bowfinger</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I just got back from fishing with the kids so I can elaborate further tomorrow if anyone is interested. Obviously, there are a lot of pre-packaged kits out there and everybody has to make a buck. There are some advantages to researching these kits, then putting one together yourself. First is obviously cost savings as you can buy the same supplies for pennies on the dollar from your local Ag store like "Big R", "Ranch Supply", etc. Second, if you take the time to put a kit together you know what you have, where it's at, and why you have it. For cuts, smashed fingers,superficial wounds, and broken bones your really taking about minor stuff to provide comfort or cover a wound till you get to the local Doc shop or home. When you start looking at "buying time" some basic training and knowledge probably more important than the amount you payed for your kit. A few bad things that I can think of which can come up on the range or in the woods shooting are: Gunshot wounds, knife wounds, explosions, chemical exposures, and even seizures. You can "almost" always slow or stop bleeding with focused firm pressure. This can be a finger, palm, elbow, etc. Tourniquets are "almost" never used unless nothing else works and the bleeding is profuse. Even then they have to be watched closely. Burns covered with clean moist wet gauze(there are more expensive burn dressings but there just going to take them off and through them away when you get to the ER). Saline eye wash is always a good thing for irrigating chemical exposures to the eyes and face(This is really cheap). Seizures are more frequent than you would imagine and they tend to scare people. Seizures usually look worse than they are, and for the most part you turn the person to their side in case they puke make sure they don't choke or hit their head. It seems like they last minutes when it's usually only seconds. On the other hand if you were taking an extended trip where medical care is a few days away, then your talking splint material, antibiotics, pain medications, etc.........and some condoms and Viagra aren't a bad idea!......If anyone is really serious about putting together or buying a medical kit I'd be glad to make some suggestions but a little first aid training most of the time makes up for all the basic equipment money can buy. A good analogy would be if I went out and bought a high end bench gun. I can afford it and brag about how good it is but with my limited training I could never shoot it as well as some of you can shoot a cheaper off the shelf gun. Anyway, sorry if I was to long winded,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,JS </div></div>
I disagree with the statements on the tourniquet, but other than that, spot on. </div></div>
well its kind of a legal nightmare to use a tourniquet, if you cant get that person to a hospital befor an hour after using a tourniquet they have to amputate because its too late to save the limb, you would be better off legaly to let the guy bleed to death over using a tourniquet or get your self into a lawsuit and lose most likly because the guy lost an arm or a leg, if you cant get permision to use it by the victom i wouldnt use a tourniquet </div></div>
Amputate if not to the hospital in under an hour? WHAT? You are putting out some very old information:
http://www.tacmedsolutions.com/blog/?p=167
The fact is, hundreds, if not thousands <span style="text-decoration: underline">more</span> men and women would be missing limbs from the last 11 years of war if the "1 hour rule" to tourniquets were true. First, the generally accepted limit when not using methods to flush the acid build-up is 2 hours, which can be extended by releasing the tourniquet for a few minutes prior to the 2 hour mark. It can go much longer if the ER doctors are informed how long the tourniquet has been on, if there has been release time and are not complete retards with modern methods of limb recovery from tourniquet use.
So wide-spread is the use of tourniquets that all soldiers and marines are issued one in their first aid kit... instruction now dictates that if it is deep red arterial bleeding, you move straight to a tourniquet then once the bleeding has stopped, apply a bandage to keep the wound as clean as possible. They have literally became a first step for many wounds that 10 years ago would have seen attempts at dressing, pressure dressing and improvised tourniquets. They are the single biggest life-saving application of aid on the battle field. If soldiers can go hours before removal of the tourniquet and not have limbs amputated, there is no reason someone here in the states with the fast access to hospitals and ER's would have any worse of a chance.
Oh and if legal issues are your concern- check into the laws of the state you are in- some allow a person to use any life saving means for which they have knowledge in to give another aid and cannot face a civil suit. Others don't have such nice protections. Those without such protections, if you are worried about legal problems, you'd best keep on about your business. You run the risk of litigation for what you do, but also for what you DO NOT do (You knew about tourniquets but only applied pressure- individual bled out and family says you caused the loss of life by not applying your knowledge or by preventing someone who may have done so by acting since you were already there, providing a lower level of aid than needed. Just like in self defense shootings, fear of litigation should never enter your mind. If it does, you should remove yourself from the situation without acting. In matters of life and death, you don't have the luxury to contemplate litigation possibilities. I would hate to meet the individual who would stand over a person with arterial bleeding in their leg and ponder what to do based on finding themselves in court. </div></div>
Brother, I could not agree with you more.
1980 dont use torniquets because you ill get sued.
2012 Use when needed to save a life.
I dont drive my vehicle down the street without a tourniquet after going through Combat Life Saver and seeing it used in field