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Get First Aid At Once! Big Aches From Little Injuries Grow
National Archives Identifier
• 534135
Local Identifier
• 179-WP-286
NAIL Control Number
• NWDNS-179-WP-286
catalog.archives.gov/id/534135
Created Date
1942-01-01/1943-12-31
Creator
Office for Emergency Management. War Production Board. 1/1942-11/3/19
Revised edition on the American Red Cross First Aid text book found in so many homes. This is a corrected reprint of the 1933, 1937 books. In used vintage condition, with multiple rips and creases of cover. See photos. Name written in ink of inside cover. Front and back covers are still attached to spine, but not to the staple, again see photos. 256 pages, with pictures throughout.
Train the trainer.
CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE WARHORSE, Iraq – Sgt. 1st Class Vincent Valencia, far left, noncommissioned officer in charge of the Surgeon cell for 2nd Advise and Assist Brigade, 25th Infantry Division, and Staff Sgt. Eric Mulkey, medical section sergeant, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 21st Infantry Regiment, 2nd AAB, 25th Inf. Div., join an Iraqi Policeman and an Iraqi Army soldier in recognition for their contributions to an Emergency Medical Technician course during the EMT Graduation Ceremony Feb. 3, 2011 at Faulkenberg Theater on Contingency Operating Base Warhorse, Diyala province, Iraq. The Iraqi Policeman graduated from a previous iteration of the EMT course, and the IA soldier acted as a student teacher because of his accelerated learning speed and his knowledge in the medical field.
(U.S. Army photo by Cpl. Robert England, 2nd AAB PAO, 25th Inf. Div., USD-N)
Combat medics train on simulated casualities at the Medical Simulation Training Center in Vilseck, Germany March 30, 2011. (Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Christopher Fincham)
We bought this kit because seeing other idiots on the trail made us realize that we might at some point need to help other hikers out.
Laurel Kincl (center) an occupational safety researcher at Oregon State University, helps fishermen Kien Jones (left) and Jason Jones (right) lift instructor Kevin Buch, a diving and small boat safety officer with OSU, during a simulation aboard a boat in Newport. The exercise was part of a first-aid training for fishermen that was funded by Oregon Sea Grant and the Eder Family Fund. Buch taught it with help from Angee Doerr (far right), a marine fisheries specialist with Oregon Sea Grant. Kincl and Viktor Bovbjerg, who are both occupational safety researchers at OSU, are the leaders on the project. (photo by Tiffany Woods)
Angee Doerr, a marine fisheries specialist with Oregon Sea Grant, watches fisherman Charles Cromer perform CPR on a dummy during a first-aid training in Newport while fisherman Kien Jones (center) also performs CPR. Oregon Sea Grant and the Eder Family Fund paid for the class. It was taught by Kevin Buch, a diving and small boat safety officer with Oregon State University with help from Doerr. Laurel Kincl and Viktor Bovbjerg, both occupational safety researchers at OSU, are the leaders on the project. (photo by Tiffany Woods)
Photo by: Didor Sadulloev / UNDP
Women in Shahrinav learn first aid techniques to become rescue assistants in case of emergency. At least one of them has admitted to have already used the skills she has learned during a car crash on the road. UNDP organizes the training jointly with the Committee of Emergency Situations of Tajikistan to build resilience against climate shocks. Shahrinav, Tajikistan.
#SAR_Homs #First_aid squads responded in the evacuation to transport people who were unable to be move
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, F. Edward Hebert School of Medicine students participate in field exercises at Quantico Marine Base, VA. Casualties are given first aid prior to evacuation to a BAS.
Learning first aid was a lot of fun - especially the gruesome made up wounds which really impressed the girls. The girls learnt how to treat these wounds, bandaging etc under the beautiful shade of a gum tree.
Fishermen Kien Jones (left) and Charles Cromer perform CPR on a dummy during a first-aid training in Newport. Oregon Sea Grant and the Eder Family Fund paid for the class. It was taught by Kevin Buch, a diving and small boat safety officer with Oregon State University, with help from Angee Doerr, a marine fisheries specialist with Oregon Sea Grant. Laurel Kincl and Viktor Bovbjerg, both occupational safety researchers at OSU, are the leaders on the project. (photo by Tiffany Woods)
Repository: Duke University Archives. Durham, North Carolina, USA. library.duke.edu/uarchives
Trying to locate this photo at the Duke University Archives? You’ll find it in the University Archives Photograph Collection, box 77.
First Aid
Jack Hanna Trail, Busch Gardens Williamsburg, Williamsburg, VA
This is the park's one and only first aid/health services building, which is located beside the Aquitaine railroad crossing. It has been located here since the park's May 1975 opening.
On October 8, 2013, members of the Louisville Area Chapter Board of Directors and young professionals group Crossing Generations attended a skills session to complete re-certification in First Aid, CPR and AED. Prior to the in-person skills session, participants were able to complete the reading and test portion online at their own pace.
To learn more about the Board of Directors, Crossing Generations, or the life-saving courses offered by the American Red Cross, visit www.redcross.org/Louisville.
Photo by Anna Rosales-Crone
Bio Med Personal Eye Wash Stations conveniently include four 7 ounce canisters of Bio-Med Wash for safe removal of irritating chemicals from the eyes and skin. The Bio Med Personal Eye Wash Station is ideal for use by first responders, police officers, industrial first aid, emergency medical technicians, emergency room personnel, military personnel and medics. Bio Med Wash Stations feature an economically designed, wall mounted fixture available as a screw mount or self-adhering mount for easy installation on all surfaces. The Bio Med 47081 Personal Eye Wash Station requires screw mount assembly to the wall. The Bio Med 47085 Personal Eye Wash Station comes pre-assembled with self-adhering tape. Each station includes two 7 ounce canisters of Bio-Med Wash, mirror, wall mount station and two canister holding brackets.
A decade of research has revealed Bio Med Wash as the most effective and safe first aid wash for eyes and skin. The Bio Med All-Natural, Sterile First Aid Wash is the first product that replaces saline solution for washing abrasions, cuts and lacerations. This emergency eye wash product is invaluable in the initial washing of eyes irritated by foreign particles, heavy smoke, dust and perspiration. Bio Med Wash helps cleanse and dilute harmful liquid chemicals from skin or eyes. Proudly made in the U.S.A., Bio Med Wash is chemical and saline-free, composed of tissue culture grade water with no impurities or contaminants. The first aid eye wash has a natural pH of 6.4. Due to the combination of purity, a slightly acidic pH, and an ideal mineral nutrient content, Bio Med Wash is quickly and beneficially absorbed by damaged tissue.
The Bio Med Wash Eye Emergency Eye Wash Station exceeds Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and American National Standards Institute (ANSI) portable requirements. Bio Med Personal Eye Wash Stations are excellent for construction sites, maritime operations, portable trailers and border patrols.
A rectangle plaster is a very awkward plaster to use when you have a cut on the very end of one side of your finger. It invariably means the sticky part of the plaster will actually stick to the wound and it widens the finger, making typing very awkward. Also, it leaves ugly pleats that gather dirt quickly and look awful to onlookers of gesticulation.