whiteworks
Custom Shutters by WhiteWorks
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2007
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Anyways I figured I’d take a moment to bring up a topic here that everyone is susceptible to, having a proper first aide kit onboard the boats, offroad cars, tow vehicles, and a little know how to use them. I’m not one to speak softly, my friends are old, fat, out of shape and trying daily to kill themselves, booze, coke, unprotected sex, fast cars, fast boats, driving while not wearing a Rona mask by themselves, all the high risk behaviors
I’ve taken the approach to not be someone who’s easy to die around. We held a family wide first aide training last year. Had a trauma nurse come out and do a first aide, stop the bleed, CPR training at my cousins house, 15 people got certs or renewed them that day. It had been over a decade since my last cert and things have changed. As well as learning some things, it became evident I was not as prepared as I should be while in remote locations with extended response times for medical response.
Tourniquets and several of them are now onboard all vehicles, and fist aide kits. They are $15.00 on amazon, send your wife a link and pick up a few, I carry extra and now hand them out to people we meet along the trail, everyone likes it when you give them tools that promote them living longer
I’m also now carrying a defibrillator, like I said my friends are fucked, so yes I roll to the party with an AED. I’ve talked with my first responder pals, given the option of having one out in BFE when a heart is stopped vs. not having one on hand, all have opted for the getting the zap. I picked up a used unit for $500. Well worth the cost of one of my buddies lives.
Last thing that I’m gonna bring up is something the trauma nurse told us she teaches down in Baja. When building out kits for the locals, she includes a bag of cayanne pepper. This is a coagulate and dumped on a gusher with lots of rags can help stop the bleed. Cheap and easy to have around vs. the little impregnated clotting wad$.
Average first responder time is like 7 minutes in metropolitan areas if things go well. We are constantly in places where 30 minute response would be amazing on a good day and several hours is more then possible while out and about. Look the chances of being successful doing chest compressions on your pal out in the desert for hours is not good, but I’ll be damned if I’m just gonna stand there and watch them die.
Stop the bleed, keep them breathing.
What’s in your first aide kit?