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Medique 40088 First Aid Auto/Travel Kit, 88-Piece
Price : $25.99 $33.95
Features
: - Ideal for any home and office, sports activity or construction sites
- Compact nylon case and 88 pieces
- Easy transportable with convenient handle and heavy duty clip
- Kit contains detail listing below
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Customer Review :
safety
I brought this as a gift for my son to keep in his car. Better to need and have then to need and don't have. thank you for your busines
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Very Complete kit
Filled with bandages, bandaids, first aid creams of various types. If you need more than what's in here, you should call 911.
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Love this kit!
The great thing about this kit is that everything in it is easy to find. The kit unzips and folds out. Everything is in mesh compartments that you can see through. I'm lost in plastic box kits with square compartments - if I was in a state of panic dealing with an injury, I would never be able to find what I needed with one of those kits. This kit isn't like that.
I also like that this kit is nice and compact. It is flat enough to keep in a glove compartment with your car manual or under your car seat. Mine is under the seat, ready for any emergency.
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Excellent Sports Kit
I have daughters that are in every sport from volleyball to soccer. This is an excellent sports kit to have in the van or SUV. Fits great under the front seat and has already come in handy a few items. We have now bought one for every vehicle.
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Medique 40061 First Aid Kit, 61-Piece
Price : $16.00
Features
: - Ideal for any home and office or sports activity
- Compact plastic case and 61 pieces
- Designed to meet OSHA requirements
- Kit contains detail listing below
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Great for the price!
This was bigger than I expected, heavy plastic case and all the essentials. What a great item for the low price. I would highly recommend!
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Medique 40038 Pocket First Aid Kit, 38-Piece
Price : $9.66
Features
: - Ideal for any home and office or sports activity
- Compact nylon case and 38 pieces
- Easy transportable with convenient handle and heavy duty clip
- Kit contains detail listing below
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Customer Review :
Not worth the price
When I received this item I was shocked at how few valuable first aid items are included. At a price of 12 dollars IT IS NOT WORTH IT. Maybe it is worth 1 dollar. This item is of no value and you can get a much better deal at the local drug store. I returned it the same day it arrived. DO NOT BUY THIS ITEM!!!!
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Nice Tiny Kit
This kit is really, really small. It is something to carry in your glove compartment, or in a purse or pocket. It looks like a back pack for a small stuffed toy, and for this reason, I think it is perfect for teaching children about first aid. In any case, it holds all the essential bandages, but don't expect it to be big. Its really very small.
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Medique 40210 Multi-Purpose First Aid Kit, 120-Piece
Price : $24.20
Features
: - Ideal for any home and office, sports activity or construction sites
- Designed to meet OSHA requirements
- Easy transportable with convenient handle
- Kit contains detail listing below
Average
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No review yet |
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Medique 40136 Multi-Purpose First Aid Kit, 136-Piece
Price : $32.86
Features
: - Ideal for any home and office, sports activity or construction sites
- Easy transportable with convenient handle
- Designed to meet OSHA requirements
- Kit contains detail listing below
Average
Customer Rating : Not
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No review yet |
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Questions & Answers
Question : Legal requirements for including S2 S3 and S4 drugs, medications into first aid rooms and first aid kits?
under workcover and other nsw Acts, what must be done to gain approval to have drugs and medications e.g. asthma puffers, epi pens. included in workplace first aid rooms and first aid kits in the workplace and first aid kits outside of the workplace e.g. hikinga risk assessment would have to be carried out, as would consultation with staff, a description of the likely hazards to be found in the workplace - dust - allergens.what else? I AM IN NSW AUSTRALIA, SO LOOKING UNDER NSW LAWI would be most grateful for your responses
Answer:
I doubt very much that you will be able to have medications such as S3 and S4 in first aid rooms and/or kits.It's very hard to find somewhere that is even legally allowed to administer an S2 drug to anyone. Because of the legalities concerning medications being given to persons with allergies to different meds, there isn't a great deal that any business/school etc can have in first aid kits and/or rooms.
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Question : Why is Iodine good to have in First Aid Kits?
Someone told me recently that it is better to have Iodine wipes/swabs/liquid in your First-Aid kits rather than Peroxide and/or Alchol. I wanted to know why? And which brand of Iodine to get as I notice a few brands (Betadine, Providone). Help!!!
Answer:
If you get surgery done they use iodine to disinfect the area to be cut. Not peroxide or alcohol. I think I will stick with iodine...
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Question : Who makes the silicone-coated nylon pouches for Adventure Medical's ultralight and watertight first aid kits?
Does anyone know where I can find small silicone-coated nylon pouches such as the yellow ones Adventure Medical uses in their lightweight first aid kits? (USA)http://www.adventuremedicalkits.com/product.php?catname=Ultralight&prodname=Ultralight%20&%20Wa tertight%20.9&product=119
Answer:
Alosak makes them. I'm guessing you could find something like this or similar in sport stores. To be honest, youre purchasing the aid that is given in the pouch, not the pouch itself right?
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Question : What should you put in your first aid kits?
I need to know what types of things you should put in your first aid kit because i am going to the beach and need some ideas
Answer:
peroxide, alcohol, iodine, bandaids, gause, tweesers, scissors, neosporin, bacitracin, foile burn creme, tapes, safety pins, triangle bandages, tongue blades or popsicle sticks, flashlight, thermometer, whew....ammonia inhalants...a gallon of clean water for washing, a mild soap like ivory, vaseline, ky jelly, i know that i missed something, tylenol, aspirin, advil, itch creams/sprays, bactine....sunscreen, zinc oxide, a sombrero-like hata small tackle box might help to keep things organizedif going to the beach, take vinegar in case you come in contact with a jelly fish, and a credit card to remove the pneumocysts if you do come in contact with one
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Question : which of these Pet first aid kits should I get?
I am going away to a friends cabin in the adirondacks and I am bringing my two yellow labs. I have found these pet first aid kits at e-firstaidsupplies.com which I have bought other things from this site in the past and have been impressed with there quality. which one of these would you recommend I get. I don't know how far his cabin is from the nearest town and I want to be prepared should anything happen. http://www.e-firstaidsupplies.com/first-aid-kit-66.html
Answer:
I am going away to a friends cabin in the adirondacks and I am bringing my two yellow labs. I have found these pet first aid kits at e-firstaidsupplies.com which I have bought other things from this site in the past and have been impressed with there quality. which one of these would you recommend I get. I don't know how far his cabin is from the nearest town and I want to be prepared should anything happen. http://www.e-firstaidsupplies.com/first-aid-kit-66.html
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Question : are first aid kits required in all places of employment?
my place of employment does not have a stocked first aid kit that is readily available to employees. Are there OSHA regulations that should require my employer to have one? My place of employment is a call center, if that matters any.
Answer:
No there are no requirements to have one, but if you have one there are requirements for what it contains. What it does mean is that in the absence of first aid, you call an ambulance. So that is why all employers have a first aid kit.
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Question : Are there laws requiring public places to have FIRST AID kits in case of emergencies?
I'm curious about this. It only makes sense that every public place has some sort of FIRST AID KIT to treat, lets say a somewhat deep cut, or a puncture, etc., while rescue workers get there. I'm sure this would help in the spread of MRSA (methicillin resistan Staphylococcus aerous) which has just killed a young man in Virginia, making 21 schools close.Supposedly this bacteria will be killing more people than AIDS!!!
Answer:
yes there are
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Question : Does anyone know a company that supplies first aid kits?
I need to know a company that will come to my place of bussines and keep my first aid supplies up dated and in stock, does any one know please help. Am in Anaheim, CA.please help
Answer:
Try these guys. They have facilities all over the US.http://www.cintas.com
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Question : Is there a type of patent that covers kits? For example, does a first aid kit have a patent?
I'm thinking the arrangement of items packaged and sold is an original idea so it should have a patent no?
Answer:
Yes, kits can be patented. But to be patentable, it usually needs to be a new combination of stuff, and there probably needs to be some synergy or special benefit to the collection.Last year, there was a good case on medical kits. You can read it here: www.fedcir.gov/opinions/05-142... The patent was held invalid, but the case is a great road map.A design patent might work as well, or instead. Design patents are cheaper and faster to get than utility patents (usually), though they usually won't give you as strong protection either.The decision to pursue patents, which kind and how much to spend is a business decision that merits consideration and planning.Although you can do it yourself you will probably regret it later. But then, you could spend $25k+ with a patent attorney and regret it, too. Patent services are like medical care. Cutting costs now can result in huge costs later. Often, you won't know about the problems until later, and by that time the situation is irreversible.The patent process is like a tennis match. To get the application prepared and filed ("serving the tennis ball") you are probably looking at $9-17k for something like what you describe.The patent office will return the serve, so you will have additional costs for hitting the ball back. When the patent office agrees to grant the patent, there are additional costs for the final processing. All told, after filing the application, the follow-on costs are typically in the $1,500-15,000 range (depending on lots of factors).There's also the option of an informal provisional application, which typically runs $2,000 or less. The provisional expires in 12 months and there's no tennis match. They generally don't provide much protection, but they are great to get "patent pending", to establish a date of invention, and to set deadlines for making a formal application.Lots of people like to file provisionals to get their feet wet and during initial market tests. If it looks like the product will sell then they decide whether to pursue a real patent.The patent law has some gotchas, including deadlines. The US and foreign laws favor early filings.These estimates are budgeting guidelines based upon having a competent patent attorney doing the work, and include the government fees and other costs. You can look up the government fees at www.uspto.govFeel free to ask me more direct questions. My email address is public. Hope this helps. -Steve
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Question : Requirements for first aid kits in public school classrooms?
I've been working in a public school classroom in California and have noticed that their first aid kit is not stocked very well (basically has a few band aids, alcohol wipes and a few gloves). I've been looking online to see if I could find what the requirements are as far as first aid kits in classrooms. Or, are they fine as long as the supplies are in the office?
Answer:
Check with the schools administrator, coordinator, or nurse. California doesn't have a set standard for first aid kits.
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