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Packs, bags and pouches

Started by SARMedTech, June 25, 2007, 06:41:55 AM

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SARMedTech

Im sure this has been done to death, but Im a nube  so please humor me. I am still in the phase of shopping for the perfect pack. Preferably something modular that could be broken down for use as my 24 pack, carried all together for extended SAR operations and exercises and also something that I can put my EMT  ;) emergency stabilizing first aide gear in. Im thinking of the CFP-90, but have also looked at Alices (including a sort of newer model called the Malice Pack) and modular Molle gear. Also, If I ended up going with a smaller pack (like a small alice) could I also wear a LB vest for first aide gear or is that prohibited by regs. Ive seen lots of combinations in photos and my squadron ranging from a cadet who carries a full medics pack (which is about 30 inches from top to bottom and about 11 inches from his back the the front of the pack..he isnt an EMT) to a Swiss Army surplus ruck sack, which is very cool by the way and would make a great 24. If you'd like to check it for use shoot me a PM and I will give you the link.  I currently have a personal first aide kit for myself that is the VietNam era little pack that goes on the belt.  Im still stumbling around to acclimate  into my Squadron ( At age 33 and other than the cadets, I am the youngest  in my squadron. With some of the "silver backs" health I should probably carry bi-phasic AED....just kidding.) Is stuff hanging on the belt allowed? I havent been in long enough to have regs memorized. The little  first aide pouch is for when I hurt MYSELF cause i wasnt paying attention and walked into a low tree limb and dont want to halt the line. I know alot of you dont approve of my insistence that alot of EMT/BLS supplies should be in the field but its the way I do things...also, Im a major gear head and I wear my Master Gear Head badge with pride, but geez,just cause a guy carries a 15,000 candlepower flashlight, he's branded for life.  I recommend this light to every EMT, LEO etc that I meet. Its mil-spec and is also considered a less lethal light "weapon".  I will probably catch it in this thread for that.

Since its too late to make a long story short I will get to my point. I would be eternally  grateful to any and all who could respond to this thread with what you carry when ground pounding, your experienced opinions on modular or self contained, internal or external frame. If you can post photos, or PM them to me I would be very grateful. If you do, could you please show a photo of the pack all closed and squared away and then an open shot of how your battle rattle is organized. Also, going back to the EMT thing, does anyone know if thigh rig packs are authorized.  Thank you in advance for helping the nube.

PS--I know this is probably a stupid posting and that more than a few may well tell me so please give me a little wiggle room for asking stupid questions.
"Corpsman Up!"

"...The distinct possibility of dying slow, cold and alone...but you also get the chance to save lives, and there is no greater calling in the world than that."

IceNine

First off welcome, 

Several times you ask if things are prohibited and the answer to all of them is No, you can at this time carry any pack that you want without fear of discipline.  There are specific Items that you are not allowed to carry or specs that define what you can. 

As far as the med pack as long as you don't carry anything beyond BLS supplies you should be OK.  Depending on the are in which you operate it is also not a wise idea to carry ET Tubes, IV's, etc.  So stick to stopping bleeding, fixing blisters, and splinting and I carry some basic airway stuff, and you will be OK. 

I personally carry the Molle version of the Ruck Sack.  It has a large inner area, a flap with a plasticized map case,  a small pouch on the outside, and straps on the sides.  It also has a large "butt pack" on the bottom which is store my sleeping bag, sleeping pad, and camp pillow in. 

For the 24 I am using a Helo pilot survival vest right now.  I am planning on switching to one of the blackhawk systems that has the pouches in front only. 

The things that I have found that work for me are a 24 hour pack with nothing on the back except my camelbak.  And the 72 as mentioned.  You should choose a vest for 24 that is modular, just keep in mind that the bulk of CAP's missions are ELT and you are in and out of the vehicle A Lot there is nothing worse than taking off your 24 gear 8 million times because you cant sit on it.
"All of the true things that I am about to tell you are shameless lies"

Book of Bokonon
Chapter 4

SARMedTech

if you know it, could you please send me a link or give the web address so i can take a look at the pack. It sounds alot like what I am looking and much more versatile and adaptable than the CFP.  I only carry BLS supplies and OTC meds that I can give out for the cadets and officers to "self administer." What airways do you carry. i was thinking NPA and OPA but am not sure how it would play out if i stuck a tube down someones nose or stuck a chunk of plastic in their mouth...by that I mean liability, etc. I also intend to pack, or at least have at my fingertips a BVM and a v-vac.
"Corpsman Up!"

"...The distinct possibility of dying slow, cold and alone...but you also get the chance to save lives, and there is no greater calling in the world than that."

JohnKachenmeister

Tell me more about your 15,000 candlepower light sabre. 
Another former CAP officer

Major Lord

I carry my 24 hour kit in a civilian backpack with a semi-rigid internal frame. Its Air Force Blue...MOLLE, ALICE and all that other military gear went out to the lowest bidder. Blackhawk is the Pro's choice. I carry my medical throw bag in the car, but there is no room for a suction unit, AED, BVM, etc.
On activities where all the gear will be in the car, I carry the whole dog and pony show, AED, O2, Hand-held suction, larygescope, Mcgills, etc.
I do carry one #7 ET tube ( I have combitubes, but they are too big to carry in the boondocks) I got myquick and dirty bag from Galls : http://galls.com/style.html?assort=general_catalog&style=MB027&cat=2732

Of course, all of this is for non-CAP activities. For CAP, you should only call 911 and never give first aid or CPR. Praying may not be permissible either, since we are a pseudo-governmental agency. I am waiting for a policy letter on this...

Capt. Lord
"The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the iniquities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he, who in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who would attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon thee."

Stonewall

Durable, versitile and relatively inexpensive...and you mentioned it.  The CFP-90.

Why I love it:
-Internal frame with harness system that makes it comfortable to carry
-Separate fartsack (sleeping bag) compartment
-Perfect size external pouches for that important stuff you need quickly
-Main compartment is big enough but not too big so you over-pack
-24 hour day pack is made specifically for that pack and comes in ultra-handy for searches
-You can wear almost any LBE/LBV set-up with it

People will argue and that's cool.  But if you're not a paid SAR expert and you're in a paramilitary organization, you can't go wrong with the CFP-90.  I carried it at Winter Hawk and throughout the Shenandoah Mountains for years.  It works.  
Serving since 1987.

MIKE

MOLLE and similar modular rigs is what all the kool kids have these days.
Mike Johnston

IceNine

I wasn't going to bring it up but I carry a basic airway kit as well.  BVM, Suction, OPA's and NPA's all of this is on my medical thigh pack.  I also have a jump kit from galls with the works minus an AED.  But, I am looking at the statpack for my field work and I will just keep my larger pack in the car.  Again this is for outside work but I like to have it available for those rainy days.   ;)
"All of the true things that I am about to tell you are shameless lies"

Book of Bokonon
Chapter 4

bricktonfire


SARMedTech

Quote from: mfd1506 on June 25, 2007, 05:01:18 PM
I wasn't going to bring it up but I carry a basic airway kit as well.  BVM, Suction, OPA's and NPA's all of this is on my medical thigh pack.  I also have a jump kit from galls with the works minus an AED.  But, I am looking at the statpack for my field work and I will just keep my larger pack in the car.  Again this is for outside work but I like to have it available for those rainy days.   ;)

I too have OPAs and NPAs but you might have a little trouble should you ever chose to use them since they clearly fall outside the realm of the "emergency stabilizing first aide" and it would be a very bad thing for all involved if you were on a CAP tasking and put a NPA into someones nostril, only to have it start bleeding like  a stuck pig because you tore the nasal mucosa: a known complication of this simple little device but one that would probably get you booted out of CAP and that would be the least of your worries. I think they are really vital to carry, but the faact is we cant use them since invasive procedures are not first aide. I think we should write to teh Health Service and ask them to provide a complete working definition of first aide as it applies to CAP. An OPA or NPA cold save a life...would be a shame if we couldnt use them because of liability coverage, or lack thereof. YMMV.
"Corpsman Up!"

"...The distinct possibility of dying slow, cold and alone...but you also get the chance to save lives, and there is no greater calling in the world than that."

RiverAux

I will agree that CAP has done an extremely poor job in defining the scope of our "medical" program...I suppose thats the value we get for giving all those health professionals advanced grade....

SARMedTech

Quote from: RiverAux on July 17, 2007, 04:15:19 AM
I will agree that CAP has done an extremely poor job in defining the scope of our "medical" program...I suppose thats the value we get for giving all those health professionals advanced grade....

Im not sure where all of your negativity and if someone says white you say black attitude comes from, but even you must be able to see that there is no correlation between CAP not bothering to define what it means by "emergency stabilizing first aide" and that fact that we have medical/health professionals who are appointed to an advanced grade because of their professional skills and licensure. Im sorry if you possess no such skills/license/certification and hence have not been promoted as quickly as you would like, but I see no reason that that should be a problem for the rest of us.  Out of curiosity, what is your grade?
"Corpsman Up!"

"...The distinct possibility of dying slow, cold and alone...but you also get the chance to save lives, and there is no greater calling in the world than that."

davedove

To answer the basic question, there are requirements on what you have to carry, what you're not allowed to carry, and what is recommended but not required.

There are NO requirements on HOW you carry it, only that you must be able to do so.  So, use whatever pack/vest/webgear works for you.
David W. Dove, Maj, CAP
Deputy Commander for Seniors
Personnel/PD/Asst. Testing Officer
Ground Team Leader
Frederick Composite Squadron
MER-MD-003

floridacyclist

Quote from: CaptLord on June 25, 2007, 03:39:09 PM
Of course, all of this is for non-CAP activities. For CAP, you should only call 911 and never give first aid or CPR. Praying may not be permissible either, since we are a pseudo-governmental agency. I am waiting for a policy letter on this...

Capt. Lord
I sure hope you were joking about never giving CPR or first aid. Refusing life-saving first aid when you're qualified (and in some areas, legally required) to do so could be the makings of a really good lawsuit....one that I wouldn't hesitate to pursue even as a punitive measure (then donate all the money to a first-aid training program for the group LOL)
Gene Floyd, Capt CAP
Wearer of many hats, master of none (but senior-rated in two)
www.tallahasseecap.org
www.rideforfatherhood.org

SARMedTech

Quote from: floridacyclist on July 17, 2007, 12:12:50 PM
Quote from: CaptLord on June 25, 2007, 03:39:09 PM
Of course, all of this is for non-CAP activities. For CAP, you should only call 911 and never give first aid or CPR. Praying may not be permissible either, since we are a pseudo-governmental agency. I am waiting for a policy letter on this...

Capt. Lord
I sure hope you were joking about never giving CPR or first aid. Refusing life-saving first aid when you're qualified (and in some areas, legally required) to do so could be the makings of a really good lawsuit....one that I wouldn't hesitate to pursue even as a punitive measure (then donate all the money to a first-aid training program for the group LOL)

Im sure Capt Lord was joking, but he is not far off the mark. We are civilians. Even if we are EMTs, we are not acting as an EMT agency or operator. Basically we are good samaritans with a bunch more knowledge. An off-duty EMT or non-EMT samaritan is not required to do anything under law. We can see someone laying there squirting blood from a femoral artery and not do anything. While CAP regs talk about first aide, while operating for CAP even those of us who are EMS responders are not bound by any duty to act and therefor if you think "I dont want to touch that" or "thats gross" you are under no legal obligation to render care, nor do you have a duty to do so. Just like me as an off duty EMT, I can drive right by a semi-truck accident and not do a thing. Im not even required to report it. I would hope that we all would and am pretty sure that we would to the best of our abilities and education, but we dont have to. As I say, as samaritan, which is basically what we are, has no duty to render care and could basically start applying pressure dressings, feel they are in over their head, and walk away. The test which must be present to prove abandonment is that you started to render care and then ceased when you had a DUTY to act. We dont. As so many members have stated, we arent an EMS agency. As far as the legal concept of neglect, this does not apply to CAP EMTs either and never applies to samaritans. The four aspects are: Do I have a legal duty to act. Answer: NO..given the way CAP regs are written.  Will the person perish or worsen without care? Can I safely perform any interventions? Do my interventions have the possibility of making the persons conditions worse or killing them. Depending on the answers to these test questions, we have no duty to act and since CAP, because of lack of liability coverage and medical direction has stripped us of the duty to do anything other than first aide and even responders are not on duty with CAP, we have no legal obligation to do a single thing. Moral, yes. Legal, no.
"Corpsman Up!"

"...The distinct possibility of dying slow, cold and alone...but you also get the chance to save lives, and there is no greater calling in the world than that."

Hoser

One proviso on the duty to act thread. If an off duty EMT or medic has a Star of Life in the back window of their vehicle, doesn't stop at the terrible death and dismemberment crash, AND a bystander sees this AND gets their license number and they are then identified as an EMT or medic they then CAN be held liable because the Star of Life is advertising a skill set and knowledge base beyond that of John Q. Public, which then establishes a duty to act. That is why I took all identifying decals off my truck, be they a Star of Life, IAFF sticker etc etc.
  Hoser

arajca

One proviso to your proviso - check your state laws. They vary greatly.

SARMedTech

Quote from: Hoser on July 17, 2007, 09:44:00 PM
One proviso on the duty to act thread. If an off duty EMT or medic has a Star of Life in the back window of their vehicle, doesn't stop at the terrible death and dismemberment crash, AND a bystander sees this AND gets their license number and they are then identified as an EMT or medic they then CAN be held liable because the Star of Life is advertising a skill set and knowledge base beyond that of John Q. Public, which then establishes a duty to act. That is why I took all identifying decals off my truck, be they a Star of Life, IAFF sticker etc etc.
  Hoser

Actually, that is not correct. Unlike an "off duty" LEO, an off duty EMT or Paramedic has absolutely no duty to act regardless of how many stickers or decals they have on their POV. The reason for this is that when you are not on duty, you are not covered under liability, not are you operating under any medical directors license. Both of these things only occur when you are on duty for the agency you work for. Im also fairly certain that a firefighter has no duty to act when not on duty as well, but no being currently a firefighter, I could say. But I am sure about the other aspect. This is true enough to be a whole set of questions on the NREMT exam and is covered at some length in the Brady text. Could you please site your sources for the idea that if you have any "identifying" emblem on your POV that you are required to stop?
"Corpsman Up!"

"...The distinct possibility of dying slow, cold and alone...but you also get the chance to save lives, and there is no greater calling in the world than that."

SarDragon

As noted above, the rules vary state by state. His rules may vary significantly from yours.
Dave Bowles
Maj, CAP
AT1, USN Retired
50 Year Member
Mitchell Award (unnumbered)
C/WO, CAP, Ret

isuhawkeye

if you are interested I have started to talk about my 24 hour gear on my blog.  I have  a few more posts before its done, but take a look
www.isuhawkeye.blogspot.com