As first seen (well, apart from a teaser)
on Breach, Bang & Clear ....
I was so excited to see this tucked away in the corner of my Propper package, because I've had a lot of
trouble trying to get one sent to me, due to the specific rules surrounding selling the
Z-Medica QuickClot Combat Gauze as an export.
This is the
ETA Trauma Kits in Fatboy which is designed to fit into the ITS
Fatboy Trauma Kit Pouches, but can also be either sealed or broken down for easy access to the individual
components, or stowed as is, in its heavy duty vacuum sealed ziplock bag. They’re also well suited for cargo pockets if you’re not going to be keeping it in a pouch for storage.
The ITS team who put their expertise together to develop the kits select every item in the ETA Kit carefully to complement the
others and serve multiple purposes. They make several different versions. The Basic, Standard and the MIL/LE ONLY version, as well as new International version, with concessions to Z-Medica's export policy.
Here's what is in the kit that I received, the Basic, with a stock photo from ITS, as I didn't want to pop the seal on mine (bad reviewer, I know).
Basic Contents
- QuikClot Combat Gauze LE (1)
- HALO Chest Seal (2)
- Pressure Dressing (1 — 4″)
- Elastic Bandage (1 — 4″)
- Z-Fold Dressing (1)
- Combat Casualty Card (1)
- Nitrile Gloves (1 Pair)
- Pencil (1)
- Contents List w/ TCCC Care Under Fire Instructions (on reverse) (1)
The kit is sterile when sealed (which is why I didn't want to bust mine open), and ITS also stock an "inert" training version, for those who want to train how they fight, and fight how they train.
The slightly more substantial
"Standard" kit also features
- MojoDart Decompression Needle (1)
- Nasopharyngeal Airway (NPA) Adj. 28fr (1)
Which are a couple of things you'd really be wanting some medical training before using, thats not just patching boo-boo's and plugging holes.
The MIL/LE ONLY replaces the Basic/Standard QuikClot
Z-Fold Combat Gauze LE with the more specialised Z-Fold Combat Gauze (w/ X-Ray Detectable Strip
— Green Package). The International Kits feature an
international version of QuikClot Gauze.
The FatBoy med kits hit very snugly into a two-magazine Platatac FUP pouch which is my gold-standard for pouches, but has an easy-access fit in their
slightly larger WUP pouches.
I will be packing the ETA FatBoy with me on all adventures from now on, and it's a good reminder for me to chase up refreshing my FirstAid certification too. This is a great kit, dense, well thought out and packaged and appointed. Lets hope I never need to stop a sucking-chest wound, but if I do, having a kit like this might well make all the difference.
ITS also stock all the same contents in
their "TallBoy"kit but stacked long, rather than wide, because it's not always about girth. If you really just need a pocket-sized pal, the
EDC Trauma Kit might be more your style.
If you don't feel you'll often be responding to trauma, but rather more minor injuries, you might consider the
ITS Boo-Boo kit, or, if you're like me and have multiple kids, and occasionally stab yourself in the leg with a sword, the
slightly larger Boo-BooPLUS kit might suit your needs.