Vehicle Medium Trauma Kit: Part 2. This is the 3rd post in a 4 part series. To see my other posts, click here (@loganhommel/poke-holes-and-plug-them-part-2).
This kit was designed to ride behind the back seat of my tuck. I chose this bag because to the compartments in the front, the side panels and the easy rip open dual zipper design for the back. The designation patch is luminescent, there is a green solid/strobe marker on the side of the bag as well as a large chemlight. I find that when looking over other people's kits, the one thing they're always lacking is light sources. I like to have multiples as a redundancy, whether it's for seeing or marking a location for someone to spot easier. After all, it's dark roughly 12 hours per day...might as well embrace it!
The bag I chose to go with is the SOTECH Radio/Communications bag. They're somewhat available, and you can probably find one on eBay for a decent price.
From top to bottom:
- Bandage and Compressed Gauze, TQ, Phokus Trauma Shield kit
- Compressed Gauze, Hydrogen Peroxide, Wound Seal and Iodine Flush
- LED Head Lamp, Bandage and Compressed Gauze and a Pulse Oximeter
Working our way to the inside of the bag, you'll see that's it's fairly full. It still has room for more items, but mainly smaller stuff.
Right, now for the fun stuff. Again, left to right, top to bottom:
- Stethoscope, Pen, Chemlight, CPR Pocket Resuscitator
- Celox, Thermometer, Ear Plugs, BC Powder (NSAID), Surgical Sutures, Bee Sting Swabs, Bacitracin (excellent to have), Steri-Strips
- Vaseline Gauze (burns), Covidien Tefla, NAR Emergency Trauma Dressing, 4x Bandage Wrap, 2x Med Tape.
4.Saline Flush Kit (Saline, Syringe, Starter Needle) - 2x TQ, 2x Bandages
- Combat Gauze, 2x Chest Seals, 2x Island Dressings
- Kerlix Non Sterile Gauze (sterile gauze is not required 100% of the time)
- TQ
- 2x SAM Splints, 8 pairs of Nitrile Gloves (DO NOT USE LATEX)
Whew....ok. The reason I said sterile gauze is not always required, is because it isnt. In the case that you DID have to use non sterile gauze in a life threatening situation, I don't think you're really going to care if it's sterile or not, and if you do....well you won't have to care very long.
Some things you can do to help keep organized would be to label your bags.. I use thick bags that I can get from where I work, they work well and don't tear easily.
Hopefully you find this information helpful either while trying to create your own kit, or spark an interest in taking a little responsibility for yourself and others around you. The next post will be my "Large Trauma Kit". With each post, I'll link to the previous post so that you won't miss the previous kit. Hopefully these posts will encourage people to become more prepared when it comes to their own safety and those around them. Feel free to give me input whether it's based on your opinion or experience, or things YOU may carry in lieu of or also in your kit.
Some of this may seem redundant, why carry multiples of things?
2 is 1, and 1 is none.
*I AM NOT a medical professional, none of this is medical advice or training. This is merely the measures I've taken for myself and those in my life. My girlfriend is a nurse and has given me training exceeding that of basic training on the tools I have at my disposal. I am also active military.