Introduction
The article is an attempt to help others close a gap that I found in my own preparedness, and to continue my own self-guided education. It pays to review what we have learned by researching and writing as we then naturally focus, and learn more in the process. The article also serves to better organize my approach to this topic, and as an inventory of some of what I have, and would like to acquire in the future. And it serves my friends who will likely outlive me and inherit my supplies. Hopefully, there will be a replacement, so I encourage others to learn. I have solid statistical grounds to expect that my next heart attack will occur soon. I have no way of knowing if that will occur after the coming collapse of this country. Get right with God. It is later than you think.
Disclaimer: I am in no way qualified to authoritatively write on medical topics. This article should not be construed as advice. But it is an account of what I have done, or wish to accomplish, and is only a course of action I suggest others might consider. For a lack of money, I had to turn down an offer from a medical school. I do not even have a college degree, yet my background certainly did assist me in this effort. Most of my education on this and other topics came later in life. Like my Grandfather, I am mostly self-taught. True Americans were mostly self-taught pioneers, and are those who built this country. We should continue the tradition. Because of indoctrination, institutionalized education helped destroy that tradition of self-education.
A Medic’s Role
Being a Medic of Last Resort, is about supporting an ongoing security operation. Security will be Job #1, yet without enough healthy fellow survivalists to do that job, and performing all of the other essential chores as well, all of the time, then security will be lacking. We’ve got to be able to patch’em up, and get them back out there. Yet the job of the medic is not only to patch them up. We are more likely to succumb to a bug than a bullet. We also need to prevent a wound of any size from becoming infected and disabling the person. We also need to combat disease within the group from becoming wider-spread, and more debilitating than it otherwise might be. Dysentery and dehydration from Cholera, Giardia, and even from nuclear fallout could do more harm to a security operation than most anticipate.
Continue reading“A Medic of Last Resort – Part 1, by Tunnel Rabbit”
