T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1635.1 | don't overlook the obvious ... | BOOKS::BAILEYB | Crew member ... Starship Earth | Tue Dec 04 1990 10:37 | 6 |
| One important item to keep in that 1st aid kit (or elsewhere on the
boat) is something for motion sickness (my choice is Bonine). I find
this is the most often used item in the kit.
... Bob
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1635.2 | First aid inventory ideas? | BOSTP2::BEAU | | Tue Mar 05 1991 10:38 | 35 |
| Does anyone have a good list of what to bring for weekend cruising? As a
ski patrolman, here's a list of what we carry (and are equipped
to use). Any additions would be most appreciated:
Bandaids
Assorted sterile compresses (1/2 dozen or so)
2 rolls of Cling
2 rolls of Adhesive tape
pocket Flashlight
Swiss army knife
Seam ripper
Chicken wire (for splint)
Tournequet (sp) materials
1/2 dozen crevats
whistle on lanyard
disposable rubber gloves (how well do you know your crew!?)
Tweezers
pencil and note pad
I would add, for a boat:
Seasickness medicine
Copy of red cross advanced first aid book
Tylenol
Earache medicine
Green soap (poison ivy, etc)
Disinfectant
Vaseline
Heat and Cold packs
All of this should fit nicely into a fairly sized waterproof
box clearly marked first aid. Also, keep an inventory and
mark off anything as it is used.
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1635.3 | | ATSE::GOODWIN | | Tue Mar 05 1991 16:17 | 11 |
|
If anyone is allergic to bee stings, you might want to carry a bee
sting kit. I don't know why, but several times now I've seen bees hang
around my boat for quite a while. They're probably lost, or just
looking for a place to rest up.
I'm allergic, so I carry a kit, 'cause it's a long way back when you
are in a hurry.
Dick
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1635.4 | lot's of flying critters on the water | RECYCL::MCBRIDE | | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:39 | 8 |
| There are lot's of things aboard a boat that attract bees, just like at
a picnic. It's amazing what critters will fly onto your boat quite a
way off shore. We were coming up the coast of long island and there
were hundreds of small black flies that kept coming over the bow.
Looked like miniature house flies but they bit. Our cockpit was littered
with them after swatting them all afternoon.
|
1635.5 | air splint, & Emerg.Med. prep soapbox | SELECT::SPENCER | | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:42 | 47 |
| Another nice-to-have is an air splint. Though they come in different
sizes, you can put an arm in a leg splint if necessary. (Some models you
can fold back to a shorter length before inflating, though it's not as
neat as having the right item.) Advantages include perfect fit even over
clothing, speed of application, adjustable pressure, inherent shock
absorption if the affected limb hits something, and ability to use in some
circumstances with a compress to stem serious bleeding.
And that saves the chicken wire for keeping seagulls from going
belowdecks.
From observation and anecdotal evidence collected from folks who help
others on the water for a living, I believe the most common serious
injuries on board are burns, hypothermia and head injuries.
- Burns require having a good quantity of *large* clean dressings; not
expensive, useful for smaller injuries, and essential when you need them.
Dehydration and infection are the enemy in large burns which blister or
worse.
- Hypothermia is mostly an education and early signs recognition issue;
prevention is 1% the effort (and .01% the risk) of coping with
significant core temp drop in a victim.
- On sailboats, it seems there are a disproportionate number of head
injuries, too. The line between manageable and life-threatening can
be finer than with the same injury elsewhere on the body; controlling
bleeding and getting help quickly are key.
Best thing to have on board is knowledge--if not already done, take a CPR
and a First Aid Course, then buy, read and carry on board one of the
better on-board medical guides. Most people prefer to avoid this
obviously excellent strategy due to squeamishness, which is entirely human
if not so sensible.
The second-best thing (if you're mostly coastal) is a good VHF and nav
system that allows you to let help know exactly where you are so others
can find you. More than one person on board should know how to use both,
since the skipper is not immune from incapacitating injury.
We all practice Man Overboard drills, right? Try practicing medical
emergency drills which require locating, preparing and using medical
supplies and playing out an Emergency Plan. Everyone involved will be
better prepared if/when an emergency happens, and feel better knowing they
are.
J.
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1635.6 | Avoiding dehydration | SELECT::SPENCER | | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:50 | 14 |
| One comment on seasickness: For a day, no lasting effects. Fro more than
a day, the villain becomes dehydration. Surprisingly to some, dehydration
is a signficant problem on board for cruisers anyway. (Ever become
constipated after a few days or a week on board?)
Apart from all the strategies for coping with seasickness itself, a good
practice is to have all crew members--including those who are seasick--
drink at least one 8-oz cup of water per watch. That's far less than one
should have, but it's a step in the right direction and possible even for
someone fully green around the gills to sip through over an hours-long
period.
J.
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1635.7 | | CUPMK::EN::ROBINSON | | Wed Mar 06 1991 12:25 | 12 |
| re: .2; I'd carry a pocket mask, too. They're useful in CPR, should
you need it. As you said, 'how well do you know your guests?'
re: .3; Aren't bee-sting kits by prescription only? If you're allergic
and you have a script, then carry it by all means. Otherwise, make
sure allergic guests bring theirs. But I would not have thought you
can buy them without a prescription.
re: .5; if I may suggest, if you use an airsplint, do not apply it over
clothes. Cut the clothes away first. The same is true with most
bandaging--expose the injury before you treat it.
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1635.8 | Compress alternative | RECYCL::MCBRIDE | | Wed Mar 06 1991 13:02 | 10 |
| A copy of "your ship's doctor" or whatever it is called is a handy
reference. I believe it also has several list of recommended medical
kits from band-aids, tape and sunscreen for daysailing to full blown
kits with sutures and intravenous drugs. We have one of these books
aboard and had the unfortunate chance to use it when a crew member got
a finger stuck in a block and broke it.
An alternative to compresses are sanitary napkins. These were
recommended to me by one of the ski areas I used to patrol at. Very
absorbent, usually much cheaper than bandages and they are sterile.
|
1635.9 | Check out the American Red Cross | SWAM2::HOMEYER_CH | No, but you can see it from here | Thu Mar 07 1991 14:12 | 14 |
| About eight years ago I took a first-aid course from the American Red
Cross when we lived in Minneapolis and had long range plans at some
point to sail off into the sunset. This was a 60 hour class that met
two nights a week for three hours and ran for ten weeks. This was
required for all Minneapolis policemen and firemen. It is a very
extensive class that went way past what is normally considered
first-aid. I would repeat this type of training before actually taking
a extended cruising trip. This is excellent course and a good way to
pass long winter nights. They provided a very detailed book on
first-aid which I keep onboard. They also have information on what
should be in a first-aid kit. Even if you don't take any classes they
are a good source on the subject.
Chuck
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1635.10 | Check out Ocean Navigator - great article | RECYCL::MCBRIDE | | Fri Mar 15 1991 15:16 | 22 |
| I just picked up Ocean Navigator and there is an outfitting a first aid
kit article. The publications they recommend to keep aboard are:
Standard First Aid & Personal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation - American
National Red Cross
Advanced First Aid Afloat - Peter F. Eastman M.D.
Your Offshore Doctor - Michael H. Beilan M.D.
The Cruising Sailor's Medical Guide - Nicholas C. Leone M.D. &
Elizabeth C. Phillips R.N.
Complete Guide to Prescription and Non-Prescription Drugs - H. Winter
Griffith M.D.
Beyond this, the article seems to describe in detail the elements for
being able to cope with just about every conceivable medical emergency
off shore or in remote cruising areas. The article is in the
March/April 1991 issue of Ocean Navigator and begins on page 100.
Brian
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