How would SAR even know something has gone wrong in that situation? What in your first aid kit can make you survive a major wound which you could not expect to survive without that first aid kit? What if you are solo - in a terrain where civilization is days away?
Me? I have my buddy beacon firing off every 5-10 minutes when I am alone. That solves the how to find me, how do they know to find me? I tell my buddy "going for a walk, back at 5" If I'm not back and reported in by 6, then SAR are called. This is standard practice among cavers, and should be used more within the outdoors community at large. Along with checkins and the like.
It's also worth noting that in terrain where civilization is days away, you really should be carrying an EPIRB of some kind. Fire off the get em out of here button, and await the whirly bird. In the mean time you have to stay alive. That is what your first aid kit is for.
Stopping blood loss from a puncture wound doesn't rely on a First Aid Kit. It relies on quick action with whatever suitable item you got handy at the relevant time. In Denmark first-aiders are trained to avoid using valuable time fetching a field dressing from a first aid kit - and just stop the bleeding by pressing ones thumb into the wound (if the wound is serious enough to be lifethreatening).
A human with a puncture wound to the femoral artery will be dead from blood loss before most people even have realised where they have packed their first aid kit.
I agree with everything you are saying. This is why my field dressing is in the left waist pocket of my backpack. First aid items are the only things in that pocket. I have considered moving it to bungied on my right shoulder strap. It is with me at all times.
Step one, apply pressure with your hand, step two, remove field dressing, and open it with other hand and teeth, apply dressing.
Not knowing where your first aid kit is, or having it in the depths of your pack is just silly IMHO.
The viewpoint I an trying to convey is that for some terrain and some environments the real safety lies in planning ones action to that extent that one can be quite sure to avoid injuries. Even with a SPOT, satellite phone (or similar) there are lots of places in the nordic contries where the response time for SAR will be several hours - if not days (in really bad winter conditions).
We are in total agreement here. In the UK we are spoilt, the response times are considerably quicker than what is expected in more remote areas.
Under these circumstances a first aid kit - packed with the items with can be administered by a normal layperson - is actually rather insignificant in regards to injuries which at all are surviable under such conditions.
Minor accidents can be alleviated by first aid kits. No one doubts that. A few adhesive bandages, a tick remover, some petroleum jelly, tweezers or similar items will be considered prudent carry by most outdoor-people. But unless the person using that kit have some kind of higher medical expertise the kits are not going to save lives in terrains where professional help is hours or days away.
Nope, but that is not a reason to leave the kit behind. Yes, most people if they get a severe injury on a mountain side in Norway will only be found when the snow thaws, and their body falls out the ice. Doesn't mean you shouldn't carry some form of first aid kit. What it does mean is you should have a higher level of training, and a higher speced kit.
I carry a space blanket myself. It is rainproof and windproof - if one can keep it out of strong winds. For use in a forrested terrain it is very usefull in combination with improvised shelters. It is useless above the tree line - as mentioned above.
I don't know Susanne Williams "Staying Alive Cold Kit", but the idea of the vindsäck is centuries old in scandinavia, The Jerven Bag is a more modern - and more versatile - rendering of the same general idea.
She explains it quite nicely in this [thread=119773]thread[/thread]. It is basically what you describe, and picture below.
When teaching courses in the colder months I insist that every one of the students - in addition to their other equipment - carry a large polyethylene bag (200L) and a tealight:
Even under horrendous weather conditions this combination has the potential to actually keep a person alive. I have been using this setup when teaching for the last 20 years. Is the "Staying Alive Cold Kit" similar?
Pretty much, yes, only with a reflective material, rather than the poly bag.
By comparison, most first aid kits for laypersons does not, by their very definition, contain items actually designed to keep a person alive over a prolonged period of time. First aid is just that - first aid. It is a stop-gap measure until the professionals can take over. The game changes drastically when in an environment where professional help is either days away or simply just not available.
Yep, I am in complete total agreement with you. At no point have I said otherwise.
But remember, most people on here are operating in conditions where help is nearer than that. Lets face it, many of the members of BCUK are only a few hundred yards from their cars. The numbers of us that make it into the true wilderness, days from help is small. I would like to think that those that do have the higher level of training to survive it.
Julia