weeds wrote:Jackson, I would be interested in what your thoughts first up after the course and their suggestions.
One thing to consider........on our first multi day hike (three nights four days) I thought I had it covered being mindful that I didn't want to carry excess. My 12yo stacked it on day two and cracked his head open. Over the next 24hrs we had used pretty much all our supplies. We washed the bandages so they were available.
We will now carry more stuff across the family
DanShell wrote:Saline solution I'm not a fan of. CPR mask, fair enough. Pity they don't make an ultra light defib, then perhaps more lives would be saved when they required cpr??
Bogong Moth wrote:As I have some medical training (but no, I'm not a medical doctor) I always have to remind myself to go easy on the FAK supplies. Mostly any serious injury requires a hospital far more than a first aid kit.
I do take one packet of thick-ish suture- not because I think we should be stitching small skin wounds out there in the field, but because if there's a serious arterial bleed I know that my best chance is to ligate it right there and then. I've never used it (except for temporary equipment repairs) but it's my safety blanket.
GPSGuided wrote:Bogong Moth wrote:As I have some medical training (but no, I'm not a medical doctor) I always have to remind myself to go easy on the FAK supplies. Mostly any serious injury requires a hospital far more than a first aid kit.
I do take one packet of thick-ish suture- not because I think we should be stitching small skin wounds out there in the field, but because if there's a serious arterial bleed I know that my best chance is to ligate it right there and then. I've never used it (except for temporary equipment repairs) but it's my safety blanket.
You are on the money here.
Though, the practicality of ligating a vessel in a field trauma situation will very much depend on one's skills. Without additional instruments (especially arterial clips), one's ability to put a functional stitch and knot on the torn end of a significant sized vessel is pretty haphazard. A tourniquet would be more realistic while smaller vessels respond well to direct compression. On this, paracord can be dissected out for finer cords/threads, perfect for your flagged application if needed and practical.
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