“I’ll Figure It Out”
Your loved one is hurt. Blood is flowing, you can’t even tell from where. It’s too dark to see well. It’s cold. You’re alone. They’re scared. You’re scared.
We all know it’s important to have a good first aid kit (FAK*). But even more important is basic, solid first aid knowledge. It’s easy to buy a super-duper, has everything–including field surgery equipment–FAK and think that you are covered when it comes to any first-aid scenario. But buying stuff is easy, you must learn the skills–especially when it comes to first aid.
Fortunately learning basic first aid skills is pretty easy: opening the airway, stopping bleeding, protecting the injury, treating for shock, cleaning wounds, etc. Unfortunately developing the proficiency to be able to quickly react and appropriately deal with these emergencies is much harder. Medical knowledge isn’t like riding a bike, it’s perishable – if you don’t use it, you do forget. That’s why medical professionals, at all levels, are constantly taking continuing education classes, re-certifying, and teaching others. I can show you how to put on a pressure dressing and you can practice a time or two – but a year later, when blood is flowing and must be stopped, you may not remember. You must develop the basic skills needed and then regularly practice them.
Back to the pre-packaged super FAK. Do you even know what’s in that kit? By knowing, I mean, can you identify each item, explain why it’s there, and do you have experience using it? My problem with pre-packaged kits is that everything comes in a nice pretty package, neatly stored in it’s own container, perfectly fit in it’s proper spot. Most of us prepper types–whether we want to admit it or not–are a bit OCD; we like things organized, and neatly put in their proper locations. So when it comes to that pre-packaged kit we do not want to open up all the little packages and see what’s in them, or move them around; we want them left alone, neatly packaged away, for a time we might need it.
But when we do need“it” too many people have the mindset: I’ll figure it out if/when I need to. That thought process implies that you’ll very quickly–under a stress-filled, potentially life-threatening situation–figure out what equipment you have on hand (and what you don’t) and how to skillfully apply it. That’s not the way things work; we don’t rise to the occasion like that. Instead we revert to the level of training we’ve developed proficiency at.
What I recommend, when it comes to your FAK, is to build your own (I differ from some other medical people on this). There are medical people who say that FAKs aren’t like putting together a fire building kit or a BOB; that people don’t really understand what is needed in a medical kit. My response to that is if they don’t understand it, it shouldn’t be in their kits. If it is important to you to have a good FAK, then it’s important to take the time to assemble it and know what each item is and why it is in there.
Also, the side benefit of making your own kit is that you will save money. Anything that is labeled for medical purposes and/or individually packaged costs more. Once you understand what an item is you may not have to buy the medical version of it, ie. a cravat bandage and a bandana are about the same thing. And it’s always cheaper to buy items in bulk.
On Wednesday I’ll write about the FAK my family members carry on a regular basis. What we put in them and why. It’ll be sort of anticlimactic because it’s really just a simple kit. But each of them know where their FAK is, what it contains, and how to use each item in it.
(Wednesday: Quick Grab The First-Aid Kit!)
*For my list of abbreviations and other information, open the above ‘Check Here…’ page tab.
I carry 3 or 4 bandaids in my wallet. Those have come in VERY handy. A bigger FAK lives in each of our cars and my backpacking kit also serves as our in home kit and lives in the bathroom. I am looking forward to see what your quick grab kit involves.
Yep wallet band-aids have helped me out several times. The FAK I’ll be posting about are essentially mini-trauma kits the kids keep in their school backpacks and Sarah keeps in her GHB she takes to work. There is also a bigger FAK in each car BOB and a BIGGER one (plus extra supplies) at the house.
It still comes down to the old mantra of “train like you’ll fight, fight like you trained”. I know it’s not combat, but the principle is still the same. The more you do things under training conditions, the better you will do them under stressful conditions.
So very true. I try and live that principle.
Agreed, even if not in a combat situation, the sight of lots of flowing blood and seemingly overwhelming surroundings, can quickly strip away our fantasy thoughts of ‘what I would do’ in this or that case. Ranging from helping rescue someone who tumbled down a wooded hillside and ended up in a shallow ditch with a tree branch piercing one calf, to a an accident victim in a car with broken bones and bloody wounds, I know that the mind will go berserk UNLESS it has been properly disciplined so that it can observe, evaluate and apply.
Matter of fact, two of our rescue dogs got into some kind of disagreement last week, it escalated and by the time I could get them separated, there was a good bit of blood (of course, a little blood looks like a lot!) and it took me a good two minutes to get them into separate rooms, clean, dress and medicate the wounds ( NOT too severe, thank God!) and then contact a friend who runs a rescue shelter to see what else needed doing. All that to say, this post is a very good one and says a lot of what we all need to be reminded of. Thanks.
Thank you very much. Very good examples, and it happens quick and you must respond appropriately ‘right then’. Having the proper first aid training and mindset is invaluable.