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First Aid Kit

menu_book picture_as_pdf bookMatt McClelland Bushcraft Australia
Issue_24_August_2017-38

There are some bushwalking topics we will never agree on. There is never going to be the perfect gear list, the best footwear or most ideal shelter. So as I write this article about what your first aid kit should look like I do so from a bunker buried deep in the earth with the expectation it will never be safe for me to surface again, rest assured, the bunker is equipped with a very adequate first aid kit.

First Aid KitWhat to Carry and How to Carry It

Matt McClelland

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The most critical part of all first aid kitsThe absolutely most important part of first aid does not fit in a pack. It is having a good practical working knowledge of first aid, its principles and rationale.

The third person I found unconscious was laying on his front, but in all the first aid training and books the casualty was always lying on their back. It's embarrassing how confusing that was for me at the time. People never injure themselves as the book or instructor says, so do not learn just what to do, understand the principles and why we do it. Understanding why means that we can improvise and deal with unusual situations and priorities them. When I studied to become a first aid instructor I read The rationale of first aid by St John Ambulance Australia, and it was a great leap forward for me. (The fourth person was in a seat.)

First aid is the assistance we provide to a sick or injured person until full medical management is available, if required. As first aiders our role is primarily to prevent other people (including ourselves) from getting injured or sick. It is mostly about experience and knowledge not gear. This is why first aid course have standard protocols such as DRS ABCD to make it easier to remember the most important things first.

If you have a good understanding of first aid principles, and you have a calm head then it is much easier to improvise and take care of the situation well - even with no first aid kit. A first aid kit is simply a tool that helps us step up the level of care a few notches. This stepping up is often very worthwhile, for example being able to reduce the risk of infection or use of medication to help serious medical conditions. The kit alone does nothing.

It is not just blood and gutsOkay, before we get into the actual first aid kit, please allow me a small soap box rant. First aid courses rarely covers mental health first aid. This is a real issue and I hope that this area of training will become more common in the future. The are two core streams:

Helping people after an emergency, psychological first aid (similar to crisis counselling), and

Psychosis First Aid that helps people experiencing the onset or increase of mental health issues.

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Garmin Oregon 650 near Mt RufusWeiyun Yu

This kind of first aid may be less glamorous than dealing with blood or broken bones, but done well it can have an enormous positive impact on the person's life and the outcome of your bushwalk. As first aiders it is helpful to be trained in psychological first aid for our own wellbeing; we need to take care of our own health.

Why do we even need a first aid kit?Now don’t get me wrong here, it is not just knowledge and experience, and I encourage you to carry a first aid kit. In some situations, a few simple items can save people's lives, like an allergy or a heart attack. Other items buy you a lot more time for help to arrive, like bleeding or snake bite. Small items allow you continue your adventure, such as blisters, small cuts or burns.

There are a bunch of factors such as terrain, length of walk, isolation, weather, and group size that will impact on the items and number of each item you carry. Possibly the biggest impact will be how you perceive the duty of care you own to people in your group and yourself. Duty of care is simply a moral and potential legal obligation to ensure the safety and well-being of others. Yes, it is possible to do the minimalist thing and manage a wound with toilet paper and leaves, but when you think through your duty of care you can decide if that is actually what you

want before you leave home. Consider the consequences of specific injuries/illness occurring and the gear required to manage them adequately. Consider the probability of such things happening, and how you would feel if you did not have the gear.

Suggested listHelen Smith and I on a project at National Parks Association NSW decided to make up a set of first aid kits up for bushwalking leaders. We made our own because we needed a lot of them and the ones in store just did not cut it for us. For most of us bushwalking types, I think the way to do it is to start with a good kit that has the contents and casing that suits you then add and remove from there.

Keep in mind this list was created for club group leaders, so it has been designed to cope with various conditions, larger and diverse groups of people.

Personal medicationsThere are some first aid items that people in your group may carry themselves. Such as medications for allergies, asthma, heart conditions and much more. Hopefully along with the medication they will have an action plan that outlines the process of managing the condition if it fairs up. Speak with them about it and know where it is in their pack.

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Personal protection

4 rubber gloves, medium size

1 CPR face shield

1 alcohol gel hand wash

Injury and bleeding management

20 adhesive bandages (various shapes and sizes)

1 spare gauze pads

3 sterile non-stick compresses 2 x 7.5x10 cm. 1 x 5x7.5 cm

2 triangular bandages

2 elastic roller bandage

1 Moleskin™

1 Steri-Strips™

1 hypoallergenic tape

1 zinc oxide tape: securing dressings, strapping and repairs

Wound cleaning

5 Burnaid™ burn gel

5 chlorhexidine wipes

10 ear buds

2 saline squeeze vials

Information

First aid booklet

Pencil & paper

Group contacts and medical details

Hardware

1 trauma shears: removing clothing, packs and shoes

1 tweezers: removing splinters, stings and other foreign bodies

3 splinter probes: removing splinters

1 small torch: night emergency backup & neurological pupil assessments

5 safety pins: general gear repairs

Medications

6 Panadol™: pain relief

6 Ibuprofen™: pain relief

6 Aspirin™: pain relief, possible use for management of suspect heart attack

3 Gastrolyte™: to help with rehydration and replacement of electrolytes

Also carry a copy of the medicines instructions

Emergency management

Whistle: for attracting attention and regrouping

Bike tube pieces with frayed edge: emergency fire starters

Gas lighter: emergency campfire lighter, sterilising metal

Micropure: water treatment for ten litres

Space blanket: keeping warm, preventing hypothermia, managing shock

PLB or other emergency communications device for when out of mobile coverage

This is a good reminder to us all, let people in your group that you trust know what medical issues you have and how to manage it in an emergency.

But what about ...?Yes I can hear you screaming, but what about …? If you want it, add it. How far do we take this is always going to be a question. Should we carry oxygen cylinders? A semi-automatic defibrillator? Splints? Stretchers?

Maybe, consider vulnerability in your group, costs, weight etc. Think about what is normal and what most other people would do in a similar situation. Think about stuff going bad and how you would cope without having it. You can’t carry a full emergency room with you - our backs are just not strong enough, so there will always be compromise and that is okay.

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It is not normal (yet) to carry a defibrillator on a bushwalk, when they become as small and cheap as your phones then I suspect they will be added to our backpacks. The first aid kit will always be changing as technology, medicine, communication and transport improves.

How to pack itIt seems that most walkers have a first aid pouch and pack it near the top of there pack. Usually the PLB is separate. This works, I do things a little different. I have 2 first aid kits as well as a bandage and PLB separate. Let me explain.

PLBs need to be handy, but not the first things you grab, so it lives in the main section of my pack.

I carry a roller bandage in snap lock bag in an outside mesh pack pocket. I just find if I need anything from my first aid kit is almost always a roller bandage, usually for a minor strain or sprain. I keep it handy for that reason. It also quick and easy to access in case of a snake bite, or major bleeding.

Oh crap! Bag. My first aid kit is for those moments when someone shouts out. Maybe a trauma kit would be a better

name, but I prefer mine. This is a clear vacuum sealed back (or just suck the air out of a snap lock bag) with triangular bandages, shears, gloves, shock blanket, etc. Basically stuff to help when someone has likely in a lot of pain or at risk of bleeding out quickly. This bag rips open quickly and hardly ever gets used, but sits at the very top of my pack.

Oh yeah! Bag. This is all the other stuff in the main first aid kit list. It is the part of the first aid kit that gets the most use. It is for dealing with the small stuff, before it become big and ugly. For blisters, small cuts etc.

Getting helpRemember that first aid is mostly about buying time before medical aid can be accessed, and avoiding things from getting worse. For most minor issues you can visit a doctor after you finish the walk, if you need to all. Occasionally someone in your group, or someone you find on the track may need medical aid urgently. In situations such as a heart attack, stick in the eye, significant bleeding, severe allergic reaction the faster you get help the more likely the person will survive as well as have a faster and better their recovery.

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You do not want to be in this situation wishing you had a way of contacting help and not been able to. Mobile phones are the best tool, when they work. Use the Emergency+ app to make the call and know your location. When you are out of mobile range then I recommend a PLB. Check out my article on Wilderness Communication for more on this topic.

Potential improvisationsThere are many things in your pack, on your body and around you in the bush that can be used to help with first aid. It is a probably a whole article in itself. It is worth considering what you already have in your pack that can be used. For example:

A sleeping mat can be used to keep a person comfortable it can also be used as a splint or as a (not very good) stretcher to help move someone a short distance if needed.

I have used a space blanket/tarp to splint a broken lower arm effectively.

When my son broke his lower arm, he was holding his arm across his tummy,

instead of going through the trauma of opening the first aid kit we were able to make him comfortable just by lifting the lower part of his shirt over his arm and holding it for the drive to hospital.

First aid by remote controlA last little tip before we finish. Good first aiders are take control of a situation and making good stuff happen. Great first aiders take control, keep things calm and instruct people to do stuff. If the injured person can safely help, then ask them to. They can clean their own wounds, and put on band aids. Asking people to do their own first aid, under good clear instruction, means you may not need to touch them at all, reducing your exposure and their risk of infection. It helps keep people calm, may even reduce their pain. It helps you be more situationally aware of what is going on around you, allowing you to deal with several injured people at the same time. It also helps improve the dignity of the overall experience and helps people learn new skills from you.

Chat onlineTo discuss the topic visit the Bushwalk.com forum and learn some more.

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