First Aid Kits

St John Ambulance recommends that all families learn first aid and maintain a well-stocked first aid kit for the home and car - to help treat injuries and save lives in emergencies.

A first aid kit in the home should provide a useful range of different sized sterile dressings and wound covers to treat injuries such as abrasions and cuts.
 
In addition, a family kit should contain:

  • Triangular bandages for emergency dressings and as a sling
  • A range of conforming bandages to bind dressings in place and for pressure immobilisation
  • A range of wound dressings to control bleeding and protect major wounds
  • Combine pads for weeping or oozing wounds and padding major injuries
  • Swabs for cleaning wounds
  • Adhesive tape to secure light dressings
  • Disposable hand towels for general cleaning (not wounds)
  • Stainless steel scissors, to cut dressings, bandages, etc
  • Saline eye wash for eye irrigation and wound cleaning
  • Safety pins to secure bandages etc in place
  • Medium plastic bags for a variety of uses including making ice packs
  • Stainless steel tweezers for removing splinters
  • A shock blanket to prevent loss of body heat
  • A note pad and pencil to record times and details
  • Disposable gloves to assist in preventing cross infection

St John recommends a resuscitation chart be kept in a first aid kit for emergencies such as drowning, heart attack, and electrocution.

St John kits contain a first aid guide to assist the first aider in any number of situations. This is important to serve as a reminder to people who have learnt first aid and to inform those who haven't what to do.
 
A Few Key Tips:

  • Learn first aid. First aid is a practical skill, which should be taught by a professional first aid trainer.
  • Never use cotton wool as a first aid material, the cotton fibres can cause complications in wound healing.
  • Never put a lotion on a burn, correct first aid treatment for burns is to run the injured part under cool running water for 10 minutes (and seek medical aid if the burn is larger than a 20 cent piece).
  • Keep a first aid manual and resuscitation chart in your first aid kit - even as a trained first aider, it can be difficult to think clearly in an emergency. A manual and chart can act as a life saving reminder and prompt.
  • Ensure your kit has large universal dressings and pads for severe bleeding.
  • Keep the kit in a location where it is accessible.
  • If your first aid kit is accessible to children ensure you keep your medications in a location out of reach of children.
  • When you use items from your first aid kit, replace them.
  • Make sure you have a copy of the poisons information centre number in your kit - 13 11 26 (Australia wide).
  • Ensure your kit is dust proof and easy to identify.
  • Dispose of materials that have passed their use-by date.
  • Remember that accidents happen everywhere - keep a kit at home and in the car.

Reproduced with permission from St John Ambulance NSW.


 

CONTACT US
1300 654 123
help@cbhs.com.au

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