This is a FAK intended for just myself, to go with a light pack for long term foot travel (significant improvements since the first post). I know it's kind of silly to mention fiction, but I think the situations in the movies The Road and The Book of Eli are useful for how I think it's best to pack.
Last month was the first time I got off my ass and went on an overnight backpacking trip. Alone, with a few bandaids, duct tape, super glue, and some pain killers. Then went out again with my girlfriend and basically the same stuff. I warned her ahead of time I felt negligent in my first aid preparations.
In addition to the main FAK, I'm putting together a loaner FAK to toss in my girlfriend's pack or whoever I'm hiking with in case they don't have stuff. They'll both live in my car. I plan to keep more in my car and my house eventually, but not there yet. Wouldn't mind hearing experiences with the later two - I heard one guy had problems with the PriMed losing vacuum (concern only for bulk, not sterility). Z-Pak stuff looks more durable, but I have no info.
I'd like feedback. Especially if anybody has ideas better suited to long term, light weight, low bulk. This is important enough for me to re-word: If you were going to spend the rest of your life carrying all your worldly possessions on your back, what first aid gear would be worth carrying, when you also have the weight and bulk of four seasons of not-dying-of-hypothermia gear packed? An Izzy and two large rolls of gauze aren't going to last me a life time. Yet I'm really doubting it's worth carrying more, for a life time.
I included where I ordered stuff from because I found it to be a real pain to find everything without spending crazy amounts on shipments from multiple places.
Stuff I have packed:
duct tape (need more, 3 yards re-rolled?)
elastic (ACE) bandage, 3"x5.3'
super glue (closing wounds)
pain killers (ibuprofin / advil / motrin, naproxen / aleve, acetaminophen / tylenol)
Loperamide (Immodium, anti-diarrheal)
mole skin
neosporin (antibiotic to accelerate wound healing)
I own, but need to find:
EMT shears
Ordered from http://www.rescue-essentials.com/ (shipping was much better than chinookmed.com)
Israeli bandage, 6" (NSN 6510-01-492-2275)
PriMed Compressed Gauze x2 (NSN 6510-01-503-2117)
SAM splint, 36" (grey) (NSN 6515-01-225-4681)
Rehydration salts (WHO), for 1 liter x2 (NSN 6505-01-197-8809)
Tincture of Benzoin, 1 ampule - good for taping to bloody mess, and blister care?
triangular bandage (cheap)
Ordered from Amazon: (free shipping)
bandaids (Nexcare heavy duty water resistent assorted, Band-Aid heavy duty waterproof large)
butterfly sutures (3M steri-strips)
Still need to buy:
a couple 3"x3" gauze pads (to reduce need to break into large gauze)
1" tape, Durapor - ("under the name 3M Nexcare HD Durable Cloth Tape - Hospital Name: 3M Durapore Surgical Tape for $2.19")
Loaner FAK: (mostly ordered)
Israeli bandage, 4" (NSN 6510-01-460-0849)
PriMed Compressed Gauze x2 (NSN 6510-01-503-2117)
duct tape
triangular bandage (cheap)
bandaids
butterfly sutures
immitation SAM splint, 36" (orange)
Tincture of Benzoin, 1 ampule
Should probably add a ~4" ACE bandage and Durapore
Chest seals sound fun, but I'm thinking the chances of me needing them and the rest of the necessary medical care being available are low enough to not be worth the cost / bulk / weight. I need to find out the recommended treatment for a sucking chest wound without a chest seal is though.
I really want a Combat Application Tourniquet (NSN 6515-01-521-7976). It's Amazon's first recommendation for me at the moment. I'd been doing a good job of not ordering one, again on the grounds that if I need it, the patient is probably going to die of lack of a hospital anyway. But they make such sexy belt pouches for them. And then I read Twich231's post about saving a life with an improvised tourniquet. Damn him. Well, he did fine without a purpose made tourniquet.
I'm interested in opinions on getting a couple suture packs like these. I have no training. I've watched a few youtube videos of people stitching up oranges, and I'm up for practicing that a few times. And for the bulk / weight, seems likely enough to be useful in a PAW situation.
I'm tempted to get a QuikClot Sport 50g teabag. Not entirely convinced it's worth the $15. CELOX looks more expensive.
I'm probably most conspicuously short on wound disinfectant. Betadine, chorinehexidine digluconate, 50ml irrigation syringe, iodine prep wipes? No way I'm carrying sterile water - any point in carrying an irrigation syringe for use with filtered surface water? Seems like it could be useful for long term re-usability, cleaned thoroughly between uses, after running out of recommended options. Yeah, go ahead and twitch, but tell me, after you run out of sterile options and hospitals, that you wouldn't be glad to have a non-sterile but washed irrigation syringe.
I want to get a shemagh, 42" cotton square (versatile desert headwear), to replace the triangular bandage, for versatility. But I haven't come to terms with packing cotton in New England, and nobody seems to make them out of Merino yet.
I had been planning to go with Gatorade powder instead of rehydration salts, but the convenient packing won. I guess Gatorade makes very similar packets, but they cost more, and I'm more likely to eat them inappropriately. I have a sugar problem.
When are nasopharyngeal airways useful? I mean, I get the idea, but when would I really end up using one?
There's a good chance this will get heavily re-factored when I have all my ordered stuff in hand.
I'd really like someone to take a photo comparing 4.5" (large) Kerlix, PriMed compressed gauze, and Z-Pak gauze, for the wiki. My impression is that they're equivalent, and the later two are a great idea for those of us sensitive to bulk. And can somebody verify that when you folks mention Kerlix, aggravatingly neglecting to mention the size, you're generally using the 4.5" x 4.1 yard stuff (model 1892 / 3324), which happens to be the same dimensions as PriMed and Z-Pak, and conflicting with the sticky that says 2.25"?
I've been Red Cross First Aid and CPR certified a couple times, not current. I'm interested in some EMT training, maybe volunteering, hell, it might be a good career direction for me (although a major pay cut), but school was a seriously traumatic experience for me, and so getting that kind of training sounds pretty terrifying. I live in Southeast New Hampshire. Manchester isn't terribly far from me. I'd appreciate specific suggestions.


