Search found 3 matches

by Excaliber
Wed Mar 01, 2017 8:23 am
Forum: Never Again!!
Topic: A True Accidental Shooting
Replies: 45
Views: 22532

Re: A True Accidental Shooting

The Annoyed Man wrote:
Acronym Esq wrote:
Dirvin wrote:
If you have a firearm on you, you should have a tourniquet on you. Period.
Does anyone (everyone) do this? Should we?
I always have a basic first aid kit in all of my vehicles, but I don't think any have a tourniquet.
I have a couple clean bandanas in my kit. They can be used as bandages, ties for splints, wiping snotty noses, and cutting off blood to an extremity. They are cheap and multi-use. Just thought I would suggest something easily attainable, for those people who don't want to put that much effort into their kits.
rotor wrote:I don't carry a tourniquet but every Boy Scout knows how to make one.
My last pass through BSA first aid was a year or two ago, but they don't teach tourniquet use any more. Proper use of a tourniquet requires that it is loosened every once in a while (I don't remember the timing) to reduce the likelihood of loosing the limb. The thinking in the BSA is that boys are very unlikely to encounter the situation of choosing between lethal bleeding and the possible loss of a limb. If the tourniquet is part of their skill set, they may be too enthusiastic about using it.

So, if anyone is pondering adding a tourniquet to their first aid kit, I encourage them to do 10 minutes of research on google or youtube on the proper use. Obviously I need a little refresher too.

Acronym 2/28/2017 9:54 AM
My choice to use a tourniquet is based on a Medic 1 class I took, taught by Lone Star Medics. Course description:
"Medic 1" : 2 DAY

This is our most popular two-day course. This course is perfect for those with little to no previous first aid training. We will cover aggressive first aid for moderate to severe injuries/illnesses. Adult, child, infant CPR w/ AED (American Heart Assoc.) will be taught on the morning of the first day. Throughout class, each student will learn by minimal lectures, plenty of hands-on skills practice, and multiple scenarios involving role players. The students will participate in the skills training as individuals and as a team throughout both days. CareFlite will fly out a helicopter, real life missions and weather pending. Some of the subjects covered in this course:
  • Medical & Legal Issues
  • Body Substance Isolation; Use of Protective Barrier Devices
  • Basic Anatomy & Physiology
  • AHA CPR w/ AED
  • Patient Assessment
  • Penetrating & Blunt Trauma; GSW, Stabbings, Crush Injuries
  • Medical Emergencies; Stroke, Diabetic Emergencies, Siezures
  • Fractures & Sprains; Broken Bones
  • Burns; Thermal, Electrical, etc.
  • Environmental Emergencies
  • Animal/Insect bites
  • Heat & cold injuries
  • Dehydration & Prevention (Caleb’s favorite)
  • Shock; Management and Treatment
  • Tourniquets & Hemostatic Bandages; QuickClot, Celox
  • Movement of Patients (how, when & when not to)
  • LZ operations; CareFlite provides a helicopter
  • 911 Communications
  • First Aid Kits & Equipment Selection
The guy who teaches the class also teaches paramedics and ER docs. He is a combat veteran as a medic with the 82nd Airborne. I worked in the ER of a Level 1 trauma center for 6 years. Everything he teaches in that class is consistent with everything I learned while working in an ER.

The fact is, a bandana will not stop blood flow as effeciently as a tourniquet. It is also a fact that a tourniquet CAN be left on, without permanent damage to the extremity, for longer than an hour.

https://www.naemt.org/docs/default-sour ... f?sfvrsn=2
Recently, a casualty suffered a surgical amputation of the lower limb due to a tourniquet left in place during a long evacuation to a local national hospital with a total tourniquet time of 8 hours; upon surgical exploration of the leg, no major vascular injury was found. If the tourniquet had been converted to a hemostatic or pressure dressing during Tactical Field Care (TFC) or Tactical Evacuation (TACEVAC) Care, it would be reasonable to expect that the amputation could have been prevented. This case illustrates the point that the need for a tourniquet must be re-assessed during both TFC and TACEVAC phases of TCCC, at most 2 hours after initial tourniquet placement, and serves as a reminder that vigilance is required to prevent or minimize tourniquet-related morbidity, particularly when evacuation is long or delayed. There have been no known cases of limbs lost to tourniquet ischemia in U.S. casualties of the Iraq or Afghanistan wars, although there were at least two unpublished cases in Afghanistan of limb loss from tourniquets inadvertently left in place for extended periods in Afghan casualties under Coalition care.
A bandana is at best a poor substitute for a real tourniquet. In fact, they often cause more pain to the patient than a good modern tourniquet. Additionally, whether you are using a tourniquet or a bandana, you should have pressure dressings and clotting agents on hand so that, in the event that the patient does not make it to a trauma care facility within the golden hour, or at most, two hours, then you can re-assess and convert treatment to use of a pressure dressing with clotting agents. But the tourniquet is your FIRST line of defense. And in the event that conversion to pressure dressing and clotting agents fails to stem the hemorraging, then you have two choices: (1) allow your patient to bleed out; or (2) re-apply the tourniquet, even if it risks the loss of the limb. Loss of a limb won't kill your patient, but exsanguination most surely will.

Your IFAK/AFAK should have a tourniquet (C-A-T or SOFTT-Wide preferred), a pressure dressing, clotting agents, a chest seal, an airway, and a ventilation mask. A bandana is good for splinting and making slings, but it isn't a good substitute for a tourniquet. A SOFTT-Wide tourniquet costs about $35.00. A C-A-T tourniquet costs about $30.00. Most of us can afford to spend $30-$35 for something that will save a life, maybe even our own.

It is true that you shouldn't apply a tourniquet of any kind, bandanas included, if you don't know how or when to use it properly. But getting training is easy, if one cares enough to get it.

Just my 2¢......
I took the one day Lonestar Medic course and can confirm the quality and info are top notch.
by Excaliber
Mon Feb 27, 2017 7:21 pm
Forum: Never Again!!
Topic: A True Accidental Shooting
Replies: 45
Views: 22532

Re: A True Accidental Shooting

bblhd672 wrote:
Dirvin wrote:
If you have a firearm on you, you should have a tourniquet on you. Period.
Does anyone (everyone) do this? Should we?

I always have a basic first aid kit in all of my vehicles, but I don't think any have a tourniquet.
I have a tourniquet, an Israeli battle dressing and a trauma kit in my range bag. Really should get another set for EDC/vehicle.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B003B ... UTF8&psc=1
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B003D ... UTF8&psc=1
https://www.amazon.com/Application-Tour ... tourniquet
Mine also includes a pair of chest seals and a pair of medical gloves.
by Excaliber
Mon Feb 27, 2017 2:16 pm
Forum: Never Again!!
Topic: A True Accidental Shooting
Replies: 45
Views: 22532

A True Accidental Shooting

This horrific story details how a 10 year competitive shooter was severely wounded and permanently crippled by the discharge of a gun that she hadn't touched in her holster.

Investigation showed that it was caused by the "basement gunsmithing" done by the previous owner she had recently purchased the gun from. The video in this link is well worth watching.

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