Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT

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Lifesaving Prepping

6738002767 061df2e0e4 m Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMTFor the past week, George’s son (who we call G3) has been job-hunting and working with his dad at the ranch in East Texas.  He missed the snow and ice storm back home in Seattle (doggone him) but being in Texas gave the two George’s some time to bounce around ideas about what’s really important.   You know.  Father and son stuff.

So while they were talking, the subject of prepping to save lives came up.

Of course both are diehard preppers but when it comes to saving lives, the younger George is the expert.  Today we share his thoughts on what he likes to call “lifesaving prepping”.

The more medical supplies you have the better

George aka G1:  Do people have any idea how seriously under-prepared they are – both in terms of materials and brainpower to deal with a medical emergency?

The younger George aka G3:  I work as an EMT and often times patients and/or their families thank us for saving a loved one or for just doing a good job.   What they don’t realize is that we are absolutely nothing without our equipment and our supplies. With our equipment we are a lean mean lifesaving/disability preventing machine.  Without our equipment and our gear we are just regular guys and gals in good looking uniforms who know a lot about hands-on first aid.

G1:  Can you share with our readers some of the must have equipment and supplies that are needed in an emergency situation?

G3:  Yes, of course.  I could go on and on about the exact supplies you would need but for the sake of not making this article to long I will give you the short list:

    • Wound care supplies: All kinds of bandages, ranging from regular size Band-Aids to huge abdominal pads.
    • Broad spectrum antibiotic cream/ointment (AND LOTS OF IT!)
    • Q-tips
    • Sterile saline wound wash,
    • Tongue  depressors (these are great for splinting fingers and applying antibiotic cream)
    • Medical tape of all different sizes
    • Containers of bleach (lots of uses for bleach, from making water drinkable to disinfecting just about anything)
    • A GSW (gunshot wound) kit, this contains
        • chest seals
        • tourniquet
        • a rapid clotting agent (like Quikclot Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT which  is available at Amazon)
        • medical instruments (forceps, tweezers & scissors)
        • Israeli Battle Dressing Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT (6-inch)
    • Soap (the more the better)
    • Surgical scrub (Betadine surgical scrub Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT)
    • Tampons
    • Digital and regular thermometers
    • Over the counter medications:
        • ibuprofen
        • diphenhydramine
        • acetaminophen
        • Pepto Bismol
        • cold medicine (with nasal decongestant)
        • Splinting supplies (you don’t really have to buy these you can make a good splint out of anything if you are creative)
        • Epinephrine mist (last resort asthma and anaphylactic shock treatment)
    • Blood Pressure Monitor Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT
    • Portable Defibrillator (AED) Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT

That is a short list just to get you started and to get an idea of the kinds of things you will need. There’s more, but first you need to get the knowledge committed to memory of what to use when.

Which means . . .

Learn as much as you can about medicine

G1:  How much time should a person spend learning medicine basics?

G3:  As much as it takes.  Let me explain that a bit.

Medicine covers a vast area of subjects and here is a starting list of things you should study now and be proficient in:

Basic first aid.  This is the start point for your medical training and an important subject. Let’s say you’re out cutting little pieces of wood into kindling, you have a slip of your knife and you cut yourself. It’s not a big cut but if you don’t clean it and bandage it like you’re supposed to, then it could become infected and you may end up losing your finger, hand or lower arm due to infection. Yes a little tiny cut can turn into a raging infection (I have seen it and it is not a pretty sight).

So if you get a cut you want to clean it with soap and water (or irrigate with sterile saline or various wounds washes that are available on the market these days). Then you want to apply some kind of broad spectrum antibiotic cream (like Neosporin or the generic version and keep it covered with a sterile bandage. You also want to clean it daily, applying fresh antibiotic cream with a new bandage daily as well. (Your first lesson – on the house.)

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Emergency medicine:  Read an EMT text book or even take an EMT class. This will give you the basics on how to care for yourself or someone else.

Continued study: After you read an EMT text book and/or take an EMT class and you want to go to the next level in understanding emergency medicine I recommend reading this book: Emergency Pathophysiology: Clinical Applications for Prehospital Care Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT , by Samuel M., Jr. Galvagno.  The book takes everything you learned in EMT class and breaks it down on the physiological level, yet is easy to understand.  It will also help you understand medicine better overall.

Public Health:  Yes!  This is an area of medicine!  It is a broad subject but the areas you need to focus on are sanitation and disease prevention.  Where to put the latrine and how to maintain it. How to protect yourself from getting an airborne virus / bacteria, how to prevent getting an STD or even HIV (even when the world is ending people are still going to be having sex and if you get an STD and there is not treatment available you are going to suffer greatly or die).

Another tip: make condoms and lubricant part of your kit.

General medicine:   There is a great guide called Healthwise Handbook Take Charge of Your Healththat is a good manual for common medical issues that arise.

Pharmacology:  Before I give any patient a medication I ALWAYS ask, “Do you have any drug allergies?’ You should also adopt this life saving habit. The first rule in medicine: DO NO HARM. The more you know about medications that better.  Here is a link to a free e-book  from the Wilderness Medicine Training Center to help get you started: Basic Pharmacology.

Also, here is another a very good book about medications: The Pill Book: New and Revised.

G1:  I have to put in a pitch for a book – which of all of them I’ve read – gave me the best insight into the public health and immunological issues which might accompany a society-threatening event: “Control of Communicable Diseases Manual”  which is a follow-on sourcebook to the Abram Benenson classic “Control of Communicable diseases in Man” from back in the mid 1980’s.

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Health conditions and medications

G1:  What about getting ahead of problems before the worst case shows up?

G3:  Before the worst happens you need to know your own health status and if you do have a health condition you need to fully understand it and get it fully under control.  For example:  I have asthma and a lot of people don’t know that about me. Why is that? Because I completely control it with the proper medications.

We all as preppers understand that if the worst case scenario happens, medications will be hard to come by (if at all) and that is why I keep at least a year’s supply of the medications I need.

G1:  I’m glad you touched on that. I know people who are insulin and tissue rejection medication-dependent that keep a 2-4 years of meds on hand and rotate through them.

G3:  I also hoard every prescription medication I can get my hands on because maybe someday I or someone else I am taking care of will need it. But if you start hording meds you need to know when and how to use that and at the correct dosages! If you have extra antibiotics in your supplies you better know everything about them, like if they are for gram negative or gram positive bacteria, what type(s) of infections they treat and, like I said before, the correct dosages.

If the worst happens, prevention is KEY.

G1:  You and I don’t see eye to eye on vaccines. I  tend to be a “no thanks” guy, but I know you have more faith in medicine and don’t look at the world through the financial glasses like I do. So what’s your take on vaccinations?

G3:  You are a worrywart.  Worry about the right problem, dad.  First off, I recommend that you get up to date on all your vaccines. I  know with certain groups of people (like you and Gaye) vaccines are a hot issue yet I have had more vaccines then anyone I know.  I have even had some that were and still are experimental.

These are all the vaccines I have had (and nothing is wrong with me!):

      • Hepatitis A+B
      • Meningococcal (meningitis)
      • MMR, (measles, mumps, and rubella)
      • Pneumococcal polysaccharide (pneumonia vaccine)
      • Herpes Zoster “shingles”
      • Tdap (diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis)
      • Varicella vaccine (get this if you have not already had the chicken pox)

The key thing is I am – and keep – current on all of these. I work as an EMT/patient care technician with the local public health department and when the H5N1 (bird flu) scare happened, I received the experimental vaccine for that,  And speaking of influenza, I get a flu shot every year.

If you can prevent it, PREVENT IT! The old saying “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” Working in healthcare really drove that that into my thick skull.

Side note from Gaye aka G2:  I have to agree with G1.  I am a “no thank you” type of gal myself.  My recommendation?  Research and education yourself first then have a heart to heart discussion with your personal physician.  If you are against a vaccine, stay the course and be 100% convinced before taking the plunge.  Me personally? Except for Tetanus, I am vaccine-free.

G1:  One thing you did not mention is to watch for vaccines that have mercury-based preservatives in them.  A typical allergy (which I have) is to Thiomersal.

On the other hand, I do keep my Tdap current, since there’s always something rusty around the ranch here.  And a loudmouth like me never wants to see lockjaw.

G3:  Got that right!  Also pay attention to what you are doing and use good judgment! People take a lot of risk driving fast and doing other things that could turn out tragic but if it all comes falling down, that emergency room that was ten miles from your home will not be there anymore.

So drive slower, watch your step and don’t put yourself in a situation where you could become injured. You could be walking in a field, not paying attention to the terrain, trip on and large root and now you have a broken wrist and there will be no one who can fix it.  And all because you were not paying attention!

Or, you could be walking out of harm’s way and step on a snake. You can get basic snake bite kits, but people seldom think of that.  It is really is amazing to me as a healthcare profession.

You may get tired of me saying this, but here it comes again: “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” How this applies is this:

“An ounce if paying attention will prevent a broken wrist or worse.”

When no help is available, every action and every step must be thoroughly thought through and within the range of actions based on supplies on hand. Otherwise best case you’re miserable and worst case you’re dead.

Moving someone up to a higher level of care

G1:  OK, suppose something really ugly happens:  Nuclear terrorism, global war, bird flu goes airborne, something like that.  What then?

G3:  As an EMT it is my role to assess a patient, stabilize them and then move them onto a higher level of care. Over the years I have developed a very good sense for which patients need to get to the ER immediately an which are stable enough to treat on scene.

EMTs doing box-time (riding mobile units) call this “Load and go!” or “Stay and play.”

Someone you’re caring for may get so sick or injured that nothing you do will improve their current situation and that is why you NEED to have a plan to get that someone to a place that has the capabilities that will improve their condition or even save their life.

Another saying we have in EMS regarding traumatic injuries is this: “We don’t save victims of trauma, the operating rooms does!” We get them stable and get them moved up the medical food chain.

G1:  Goes without saying, taking an inventory of doctors within a 3-miles range of your home would make sense.

Communications in an Emergency

G1:  That gets us to how are you supposed to find help when there’s pandemonium all about?

G3:  In the worst case scenario you will have no cell phone, no house phone and no internet. That is why you need to become an expert in other forms of communication. Amateur / ham radio, GMRS, commercial radios and CB radio are all things you should have at your disposal.  You should also be (or have access to) an expert in knowing how to use the different radio services.

This applies double to medical emergencies which happen as a subset of larger emergencies (flood, tornados, earthquakes, terrorism) because you can’t call for help if you don’t have the right equipment to do it with.

G2:  And for ideas on communications, our last two weeks of discussion of ham radio might be worthy of review.

And to Summarize it All

The Two Gs, George and Gaye, would like to thank the younger George for sharing his thoughts on prepping to save lives.  And the take away?  Peruse the list of supplies and compare them to what you have already set aside in your emergency medical kit.  Read up and educate yourself so you are prepared with knowledge to act appropriately and quickly if needed.

And last?  Pay attention, be alert, and above all, be prepared.

Hang on and enjoy the ride,

The Two G’s – George & Gaye

. . . Your comments welcome

Like this? You might also like:

Spotlight Items:   Many of the supplies mentioned in this article are readily available online.  There are also complete kits available if you are just getting started.  Whatever you decide to do, start collecting your emergency medical supplies now, before you need them.

Quikclot Sport Brand Advanced Clotting Sponge:  A must for any first aid or emergency kit, Quikclot Sport stops moderate to severe bleeding until further medical help is available.

Israeli Battle Dressing, 6-inch Compression Bandage: This is another inexpensive, yet critical item.  Combat medics, trauma doctors, and emergency responders all recommend this Israeli Battle Dressing (IBD) for the treatment of gunshot wounds, puncture wounds, deep cuts, and other traumatic hemorrhagic injuries.

Where There Is No Doctor:   Hesperian’s classic manual, Where There Is No Doctor, is perhaps the most widely-used health care manual in the world.  About $20.

Lifesource Digital Thermometer with Fast Read:  This is another one of those inexpensive items a lot of people forget to include in their medical kit.

First Aid Only Triple Antibiotic Ointment Pack:  Gaye prefers to purchase antibiotic ointment is single use packets.  That way you can keep a couple of packets with you wherever you go.  Your mileage may vary – the tube type works fine too.

Adventure Medical Kits Pocket Survival Pack Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT or Adventure Medical Kits Outfitter Kit:  Adventure Medical Kit products are well priced and with an excellent reputation among outdoor types such as fishermen and hunters.  This is a good place to start if you are looking for a kit.

Philips HeartStart Home Defibrillator (AED) Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT:  Pricey?  Yes.  But and AED can save a life.  If you or a loved one has a heart problem, this is a must have device especially if you are located far far away from medical help.

Omron Series Blood Pressure Wrist Unit:  We personally would not be without one of these units,. Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT

The Pill Book (15th Edition): New and Revised Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMT: For nine bucks, there is no reason not to have this book in your emergency medical kit.

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Strategic Pick: The Strategic-Living Gear Bag

6218911871 721d46e13c Prepping to Save Lives: Thoughts of an EMTTalk about two heads getting together to come up with the ultimate gear bag! We spent a bit of time coming up with a checklist of things we would want with us if we were either stranded (say in a storm), in a wreck (heaven forbid a “ditch the plane” situation), or even in a bug out situation.

Of course not everything can fit in a single bag. After all, you still need food, a sleeping bag, personal comfort items. No worries. With the help of Kelly at Survival Gear Bags, we have put together the basics and then some. Using this bag as a start, you can enhance and customize as time and budget allows.

Need more info? Check out the kit now by clicking here or head on over to our Strategic Living Kit page where we show all of the components and a bit more info as well.

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Special Edition: The SOPA Blackout

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6717033643 bff1297721 m Special Edition: The SOPA BlackoutYou’ll notice that Strategic Living is still here today, Wednesday, although some organizations have chosen the day to “go black” as a sign of protest against the PIPA and SOPA regulations which are due to see action in the future.

Frankly, we debated long and hard on whether to join the protest and the SOPA blackout.

While we applaud the Wikipedia action (which could be read here) there are several roads to successful opposition to SOPA and PIPA – IF they can be stopped at all.

Our reason for concern is that SOPA and PIPA are cornerstones to a global attack on intellectual freedom and rights to fair use.  They are cut of the same pretentious cloth that permits corporations to claim patents on “life” itself, which is the height of absurdity.  Crossing a shellfish DNA with wheat isn’t invention, so much as perversion, as we see it.

SOPA and PIPA are designed to quell widespread discussion and public awareness of the corporate-government agenda.  We have seen this in other countries at other times.  Thoughts of Germany and Italy in the 1930’s and 1940’s do not bode well for humans.  It didn’t then and it certainly does not now.

So while we applaud Wikipedia, we find it’s equally if not more compelling to “stay online and fight.”

Going black is good.  Saying (perhaps in memory of George Carlin) what SOPA is is just as good:  “It’s bullshit and it’s  bad for you.”

But you’d expect us to say that:  We’re not political hacks, ambulance chasing IP lawyers, or cyber security empire builders.

We just figured out how to say it in black type on a white page with the same kind of impact.

6717050677 ec539e986d Special Edition: The SOPA Blackout

Hang on and enjoy the ride,

The Two G’s – George & Gaye

. . . Your comments welcome at The Electric Tribe

Like this? You might also like:

Spotlight Items:  Today we suggest some books for your survival library.

Holding Your Ground: Preparing for Defense if it All Falls Apart Special Edition: The SOPA Blackout: An instructional guide and planning tool that addresses defensive preparation of a location. If the government can no longer protect your home, farm or property, Holding Your Ground will teach you how.

SAS Survival Handbook, Revised Edition: For Any Climate, in Any Situation:  Newly updated to reflect the latest in survival knowledge and technology, this handbook is the definitive resource with strategies for coping with any type of disaster.

Patriots: Surviving the Coming Collapse:  From James Wesley Rawles, a thrilling narrative depicting fictional characters using authentic survivalist techniques to endure the collapse of the American civilization. Reading this compelling, fast-paced novel could one day mean the difference between life and death.

The New Create an Oasis with Greywater: Choosing, Building and Using Greywater Systems – Includes Branched Drains Special Edition: The SOPA Blackout:  Create an Oasis describes how to quickly and easily choose, build, and use a simple grey water system for as little as $30 and a free afternoon.

Build your Own Free-to-Air (FTA) Satellite TV System Special Edition: The SOPA Blackout: An interesting read – do you think you could do it?

All New Square Foot Gardening: Growing you own veggies in a limited amount of space is a no-brainer with the Square Foot Gardening System. The bonus is that it requires very little water and yay! there are virtually no weeds.

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