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well then he wouldn't wanna go diving sharks with Misty Hyman wearing MoistNeoprene either
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I've been reading the incidents re: shark bites involving swimmers / surfers / divers being bit. Had some conversations with an Army SF medic, and I decided to add a tourniquet in my thigh pocket. At least I'll have one handy in case of. This one is dead simple and will work ok at least for a while. You can practice to a point on yourself over and over easily.
Amazon.com: 6.5 ft / 2m Emergency Silicone Tourniquet by Dakar: Health & Personal Care
The medic said it's a shame people die from blood loss that can be stopped right then at the time of the injury. We'll try and keep you alive while getting you on the boat / into shore. No guarantees, but we'll try.
The tourniquet was abandoned as a first aid tool several decades ago around here. If you need to stop a serious bleed, a pressure bandage is much, much better than a torniquet which will cut off circulation. A torniquet should be a last effort, when all other measures have proved to be ineffective. Like, when someone has lost a limb.
Except for combat injuries, what's the probability of someone losing a limb? As compared to other traumas which cause an artery bleed?There's a reason that all US combat troops carry them (often several) when outside the wire. If someone loses a leg or arm in an engagement, a tourniquet is going to be their only chance of survival.
Except for combat injuries, what's the probability of someone losing a limb? As compared to other traumas which cause an artery bleed?
I don't know, but I suspect it's rather small.
Then we agree on that.Nothing statistically likely, though.
Then we agree on that.
And I'll continue to prefer carrying a pressure bandage or two instead of mucking with a tourniquet. Particularly since a pressure bandage is useful for most severe bleeds except a lost limb situation, and a tourniquet isn't of much help for torso wounds. Or head wounds ("quick, apply the tourniquet around his neck!")
So why has how to correctly apply a pressure bandage to an arterial bleeding been taught on every first aid class I've taken, plus during every Home Guard medic exercise I've participated in?A pressure bandage will NOT stop arterial bleeding.