5 Items Of Essential First Aid Kit For The Outdoors
In the outdoors we constantly have to make decisions and one key factor is the weight and bulk of the kit we carry. So if we have to carry the bare minimum first aid kit here are five basic items of kit that every outdoor leader should be carrying …
Gaffa tape – what can’t be mended with gaffa tape?
With any kit that you carry in the outdoors you want it to be as versatile as possible and gaffa tape ticks that box. Wrapped around your water bottle, gaffa tape is a versatile, low-bulk, low-weight piece of kit that might just save the day. Other than being extremely good at mending boots, commonly gaffa tape can be used to tape feet to help prevent blisters or, following a traumatic accident, it can be used to help improvise and to bind splints to limbs.
Triangular bandages
Nothing too controversial here – standard first aid kit. They can be used to stem blood loss, tie in splints, or soaked in water, can be used to cool a hyperthermic casualty by wrapping the sodden cloth around the casualty’s neck and wrists. Given the choice between these and any other bandage – these would be the ones I’d choose to carry.
And, don’t buy the heavy cotton ones that you’ll use on a first aid course. Instead get yourself some Calico ones for under a pound a piece. These pack small and weigh next to nothing too. Personally I carry three.
Insulation and Protection
Pretty much, treat every casualty, every day of the year for hypothermia – before they become hypothermic. (Ok so there will be maybe one day in the summer months when this might not be true!) To that end kit items #3 & #4 are half a roll mat, and a shelter of some sort.
Here are the first aid reasons to carry half a roll mat …
- I can sit an immobile casualty upon a mat and it will help maintain circulation and help prevent them from getting pressure sores. This is especially important for the unconscious casualty.
- In addition, for the immobile casualty who may have some time to wait for help, the added insulation from the ground is invaluable. (See if you can sit on the ground outside for as long as it takes you to read this post – you’ll see my point).
- Rolled around a limb they make for an excellent improvised splint.
- If need be, with the help of a pen knife, the mat can be cut down further to create an improvised splint for a damaged arm.
- It holds my bag nicely open for me and stops it caving in when I go to grab stuff from it.
- It works a treat as an extra layer of waterproofing – especially when the rain is really blowing into you sideways on.
- When I take my kids out for a walk, all three of us can fit on it side by side when we have a bite to eat.
- If you should ever be benighted you’ll have something to kip on!
Protection from the weather
Half a roll mat, costs little, weighs little, takes up no space and is hugely versatile. What’s not to like? Short of being a fell runner, I can’t see why anyone wouldn’t carry one of these.
Carrying half a roll mat in your outdoor first aid is only half the story however. That’s the insulation taken care of – how about the shelter? For me, depending on what I’m doing and where, I take different size shelters.
If I’m out running in the hills I carry a lightweight Lifesystems Light and Dry Thermal Bivi. It’s a double skinned survival bag that weighs next to nothing and packs down so small it is easily carried in the back pocket of a cycling jersey. But if I’m out with a group I prefer to carry a group shelter. These should be at least capable of sheltering 6 adults. Anything smaller and you won’t be able to give shelter to a prone casualty within the canopy.
Insulation and protection for the outdoors is essential. In the urban environment the casualty is far closer and more speedily rescued to A&E. In the outdoors you could be waiting a long time in very cold and wet conditions. As a first-aider in the outdoors, chances are the best thing you can do for your casualty is keeping them from getting any colder. Leave this kit in the shops at your/their peril!
Casualty Monitoring Card (plus a pencil)
This really is one piece of kit that weighs next to nothing and takes up little or no space. Print yours out on an A4 piece of paper (ideally waterproof paper). I have written a post on the need and advantages for carrying a casualty card here, but in short you need to carry/use one of these since:
There are four good reasons why you should carry and use one of these …
- As a medical record
You are potentially the first on the scene. Hence you are best placed to record what has happened and what is going on there and then. Potentially your casualty may lose consciousness before the medics arrive. - It can inform your decisions
One aspect of using the casualty card is that you use it to monitor and record the casualty’s vital signs: pulse, breathing, colour, temperature, and state of alertness. In turn it keeps you focused on how the casualty’s condition may be changing. As you gain information you’re better able to make decisions. - It is of use for the medics who take over
Recording the vital signs and recording them every five minutes means that when the medics arrive they have an idea of how your casualty is progressing: getting worse? Getting better? Staying stable? - It can massively reassure the casualty that you know what you are doing
And this is the best reason in my experience for using a casualty card – it makes you, a humble first aider, look incredibly professional and this is hugely reassuring to the casualty and to anyone with them.
It costs practically nothing, it weighs practically nothing and this one piece of first aid kit is enormously beneficial. So if you don’t already carry one in your first aid kit – now’s the time to get online and to print a few off.
Will Legon (of Will4Adventure.com ) works professionally in the outdoors leading groups walking, mountain biking and instructing single pitch rock climbing. Since 2009 Will has been delivering first aid training specialising in outdoor first aid courses. He is an ITC (Immediate Temporary Care) trainer, offering a range of courses accredited by Ofqual and the SQA. In a former life, Will was a maths teacher and an infantry officer in the Territorial Army.