(Continued from Part 1. This concludes the article.)
Medical concerns
Note: This is not actual medical advice, simply a description of military methods. I am not a medical professional and if I were, I’d still have no idea of your needs, conditions, capabilities, and allergies.
I have a trauma kit, aka blowout kit, in my bag. The kind of situation that might leave you stranded far from home might also expose you to trauma, immediately or in the aftermath. Trauma is something unexpected. If you saw it coming, you’d most likely avoid it. This is a whole topic of its own, and there are many people better qualified to address it than me.
The kit is the standard Individual First Aid Kit (IFAK) stuff: self-applied tourniquet, gauze, medical tape, clotting agent, airway, needle kit. I add antibiotic cream, ordinary adhesive bandages, tweezers, and some meds. Duck tape will hold wounds closed, unless it gets too greasy from blood. Surgical glue used to close clean cuts is just ordinary superglue, it really makes skin stick to itself. A pill pack of Imodium, strong Tylenol, and some antibiotics may help you get through some bad hours and keep things from getting worse. These supplies are about 40-50 dollars at retail outlets.
As a matter of information, the SOF community issues a combat pill pack, or wound pack, that includes acetaminophen (for pain), meloxicam (aka Mobic) (for inflammation), and moxifloxacin (as a broad spectrum antibiotic). The pack has a National Stock Number (NSN) so it should be available to any medical unit, but only the high-speed guys seem to issue it. It’s meant as a pre-hospital care intervention to help someone make it for a while after being badly injured. There are allergy and reaction risks that are considered worthwhile when balanced against the benefits. Again, this is information – not medical advice! If the medication pack idea makes sense to you, check with your medical provider to go further with it. This is a very light and compact option that could be a decisive help in certain situations.Continue reading“Another Get Home Bag Approach – Part 2, by G.P.”