When the shooting stops but the bleeding doesn’t, are you really prepared?
Approximately 40,000 Americans die every year from injuries that result in severe bleeding, a condition that can drain life away in as little as four minutes. The massacre at Sandy Hook, Connecticut on December 14th, 2012, was a tipping point. In that dreadful event twenty students, all only six or seven years old, and six staff members were gunned down by Adam Lanza, who had earlier murdered his mother and subsequently took his own life. Shortly thereafter members of the American College of Surgeons, the Department of Defense, the FBI, and other experts convened in Hartford, Connecticut and formed the Hartford Consensus. And so Stop the Bleed was born.
Hemorrhage is a major factor in trauma-related deaths and Emergency Medical Services are almost never available in a timely manner. Experience on the battlefields of the Middle East as well as civilian catastrophes convinced the leaders of the Stop the Bleed program that there were immediate steps that could be taken to stem bleeding and that these measures were simple enough for civilians to learn and to apply effectively. The result is that Stop the Bleed has become the most rapidly-deployed lifesaving public health measure in the history of medicine.
Mass shootings garner massive headlines and deservedly so but most of us will never encounter such an injury. Most deaths from hemorrhage result from accidents in the workplace and the nation’s roadways. In fact, the life that you are most likely to save is your own or that of someone you love. The home can be a deadly place. An errant kitchen knife, a whirring circular saw blade, or a fall into a glass patio door or a window are among the most common causes of life-threatening bleeding. Further, because such an event can occur at a distance from a medical facility or in a TEOTWAWKI situation where a firearm injury is quite possible, it’s even more imperative to master the skills described here.
Continue reading“Your Red Bags: Stop The Bleed – Part 1, by Philip J. Goscienski, M.D.”
