Short-term disasters can bring on a myriad of medical situations and they can occur very quickly. Because of the disaster, roads may be impassable, or in some cases, the hospitals may be at capacity and cannot take in any more patients. With that in mind, it is important to know what the most common medical emergencies are and prepare accordingly for them. In 2006, The National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) released a 2006 Emergency Department Summary that gathered statistics of emergency department use, including the most common reasons adults and children seeking medical care and treatment. Having medical supplies that could assist in these common medical emergencies would be proactive on your part.
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- Children fever
- Childhood earache
- Various injuries such as sprains, strains, broken bones
- Chest pain
- Abdominal pain
- Back pain
- Shortness of breath
In short-term disasters, prepare for water-related illnesses. This will be very common given the close proximity to contaminated water sources. In The Prepper’s Blueprint, it states, “The relationship between communicable diseases and disasters exist and merits special attention. When there is a short-term emergency, there is an increased number of hospital visits and admissions from common diarrhea-related diseases, acute respiratory infections, dermatitis, and other causes. These types of medical issues are due to those coming in direct contact with floodwaters contaminated by oil, gasoline, or raw sewage. These contamination factors will cause irritation to skin and a host of other medical conditions.”
In longer-term disasters, burns, cuts, rashes and secondary infections will also be very common medical emergencies to prepare for. Folks, these are the disasters you will likely face and it is imperative that you prepare for this with proper medical supplies and knowledge.
I realize that there are a lot of medical conditions to think about. The best approach is to look at the basics and prepare for those. Many medical items can be used for multiple disasters, so take comfort in this and prepare accordingly.
Build the Ultimate 1 Year Medical Supply with These First Aid Basics
Experts suggest that each home has a basic medical supply that is unique to your family’s needs. Therefore, keep any preexisting conditions and allergies any family members may have, as well as the above list of the most common medical conditions that hospitals see. It is within your best interest to ensure that you have any and all necessary medications that require prescriptions before an emergency happens.We all have our fair share of band-aids and antibiotic ointment, but do you have medical supplies that can help with true medical emergencies? The following list is your basic medical preparations broken into sections of need to help in your organization.
Hygiene
- Liquid antibacterial hand soap – 20
- Disposable hand wipes – 20
- Antibacterial hand sanitizer – 20
- Feminine items – 12 packages
- Extra baby needs (diapers, wipes, pacifiers, bottles, medicine, etc.) – in quantity
- Exam gloves – 5 boxes
Essential Medical Tools
- Trauma shears
- Penlight or small flashlight
- Scalpel with extra blades
- Stethoscope
- Irrigation syringe
- Tweezers
- Thermometer
- Foam splint – 2 per family member
- Thermometer
Over-the-Counter Products
- Aspirin or non-aspirin pain reliever (for adults and children) – 5 bottles
- Stool softener – 5 bottles
- Electrolyte powder – 3 boxes
- Cold/flu medications – 2 boxes per family member
- Expectorant/decongestants – 3 per family member
- Hydrocortisone – 3
- Miconazole/anti-fungal – 3
- Syrup of Ipecac and activated charcoal – 2
- Eye care (e.g., contact lens case, cleansing solution, eye moisture drops) – 3 per family member
Natural Supplements
- Potassium iodide tablets – 1 box per family member
- Multivitamins
- Vitamin C
- Ginger
- Garlic
- Ginseng
- Colloidal silver
Wound Care
- Disinfectant (Betadine, isopropyl alcohol, iodine, hydrogen peroxide, etc.) – 2 per family member
- Band-aids – 3 large boxes in assorted sizes
- Antibiotic ointment – 5
- Instant cold and hot packs – 10
- 1 week of prescription medications – as many as you are able to get with your prescription
- Ace bandages – 10
- Non- stick gauze pads in assorted sizes (3×3 and 4×4) – 10 boxes
- Sterile roller bandages – 5
- Surgical sponges – 5
- Adhesive tape or duct tape – 5
- Steri-strips – 5
- Moleskin – 3
- Respirator masks – 4 cases for short-term events. For longer-term events multiply the supply.
- CPR micro shield – 1 per family member
- Suture kit – 3 per family member
- QuikClot® compression bandages – 2 per family member
- Tourniquet – 2
- Thermal Mylar blanket – 1 per family member
- Antibiotics
*These are your minimum quantities. If you are able to do so, prepare for more.
Customize Your Supplies
Many believe that a basic store-bought medical kit will provide for all of their medical needs, but these kits tend to be overloaded with unneeded items (i.e., 500 band-aids). Buying your own medical supplies allows you to customize your kit to fit your family’s unique needs and is more economical. In fact, you can purchase many of these items at your local Dollar Store to save money. Customizing your family’s medical supply gives your family members the best chance of being cared for when a medical emergency arises. Further, take your preparedness a step further and organize your medical preps and create medical response packs for quick-acting.
Storing Medical Supplies
How you store your first aid supplies is every bit as important as having the supplies in the first place.
Medicines can lose potency or spoil if they are subject to moisture, temperature fluctuations, and light. For example, aspirin begins to break down when it is exposed to a slight amount of moisture.
Unless the instructions indicate otherwise, store medications in a cool, dark place that is out of the reach of children. However, you still want to store the medical supplies in a place that is easily accessible to adults, who may need to respond very quickly in the event of a medical crisis.
Check expiration dates periodically to ensure the medicines are still good to use. While most medicines lose potency once they’re past the expiration date, there are a few that will actually make a person extremely ill if taken after it spoils. For example, tetracycline antibiotics that have spoiled can cause a severe, sometimes deadly, kidney ailment.
Signs of Expired Medicines
Although there is data that states most medicines can last longer than their expiration dates, it is important to understand that using medicine years past its expiration date can lose effectiveness and in some cases, change its chemical makeup. If you are in a survival situation where your life depended on an outdated drug, then it is wise to follow the cliché “better safe than sorry”.
Knowing the signs of expired medicine can help indicate when new items are needed.
- Creams or ointments which are discolored or have changed in texture.
- Creams or ointments which have cracked or separated.
- The medicines smell has changed since it was opened.
- Tablets are broken or chipped and have changed color.
Bear in mind, there are some medications that should never be used after their expiration and could have severe consequences for patients. These include:
- Anticonvulsants – narrow therapeutic index
- Dilantin, phenobarbital – very quickly lose potency
- Nitroglycerin – very quickly lose potency
- Warfarin – narrow therapeutic index
- Procan SR – sustained-release procainamide
- Theophylline – very quickly lose potency
- Digoxin – narrow therapeutic index
- Thyroid preparations
- Paraldehyde
- Oral contraceptives
- Epinephrine – very quickly lose potency
- Insulin – very quickly lose potency
- Eye drops – eyes are particularly sensitive to any bacteria that might grow in a solution once a preservative degrades.
Don’t limit first aid supplies to your home
Store a first aid kit in the car (being careful with heat-sensitive items) and also tuck some medical supplies into your 72-hour bag. This way, you can be ready to deal with medical emergencies wherever they happen to occur.
To conclude, there will always be the threat of completely unanticipated disasters, but your overall preparedness should enable you to effectively deal with those situations when they arise. This year supply of first aid items will enable you to prepare for medical emergencies when the hospitals aren’t an option.
This article was originally published at Ready Nutrition™ on February 28th, 2017
Don’t use anti bacterial anything!!! All you accomplish with that is hardening bacteria to become drug resistant!!! You can safely disinfect using a myriad of other methods and plain old soap with hot water covers your hygiene just fine.
I’d add in topical creams, such as aloe vera, as well as topicals for poison oak, eczema, etc. I’d also recommend OTC benadryl and allergy medications such as Zirtec. Even if you don’t currently have eczema or seasonal allergies, they can pop up later in life.
Veterinary tape. It comes in 4″ x 5 yard package. Buy it the big box pet supply stores, farm co-ops, and even Tractor Supply (TSC) stocks it. Here are a few uses:
Hold a compression bandage snugly over a wound.
Use it as a sling.
Use it as an Ace bandage.
Use it with some pieces of corrugated cardboard as a splint. (All the ski patrol folks Ii know carry it and some cardboard for that exact reason).
.
Myriad other uses, where you’d normally use adhesive tape.
You unroll about 2/3 of what you think you need and cut it off the spool, It stretches to serve your need. Plain scissors is all you need. It only sticks to itself, not to skin or hair. It is a single use item.
It comes in a wide variety of colors.
Best of all , it goes for about $2 per roll.
I have several rolls in my first aid cabinet, plus my “emergency bag” in the vehicle.
One other thing –
My travels take me into areas in WV where opioid overdoses are a frequent issue. Contact your local health department for how to apply Narcan.. In many cases after your training (maybe 10 minutes) they will give you enough for 1 or 2 doses. Do not let it freeze, it will destroy the effects of the medication.
No judgements on why I might need it for others. Saving lives is in my DNA, You just never know…