BattleGrackle said:
Sneak peek at the 2022 first aid kit for mobilized Russians
Knock off Israeli bandage
Knock off rubber band tourniquet
First aid pamphlet
End of listβ¦
Well, it compares favorably to what I was issued in the U.S. Army up until about the mid-2000s, which consisted of a pressure dressing of the type that I don't think had changed since WWII, and that was it.
Now, when I went to Afghanistan in 2009, the IFAK I was issued (actually, two of them) consisted of:
- SOF-T tourniquet
- Israeli bandage
- naso-pharengeal (sp?) airway tube (which I didn't know how to use, but since I was a field grade on a division staff, eh...)
- combat gauze
- crib sheet for a 9-line MEDEVAC request
As a cop, the only thing I carried on my belt was a TQ (SOF-T). I'm too skinny for more than that - not enough space in only 36" of belt. I did have a kit with a second TQ, Izzy bandage, combat gauze regular gauze, and a HALO chest seal in my patrol bag.
Lucky for me, the only time I ever had to use any of it was on game day bike patrol when my partner gashed his calf open on his front sprocket (tried to clip in to the pedals and his foot slipped.)
But, back on topic, the Russkies are about 15 years behind the power curve on troop first aid kits, although what they're issuing is probably the max that they train those troops to use, if they get that much training.