How Much will a First Aid Kit Cost?

 

A basic first aid kit could cost as little as $20 band-aids, gauze and wraps. If the kit can respond to a trauma it will cost more.To get more news about IFaks, you can visit rusuntacmed.com official website.

 

We estimate the basic kits will be $50 to $250, a full kit will be in the $250-$500 range and you can easily spend $1000+ if you include oxygen, a good BP cuff and/or surgical kits and specialized secondary kits.
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When we purchased everything we needed for our first aid/trauma kit, the items cost about $250 including the case.

 

If you can’t afford a quality pre-made first aid kit, you can build one, piece by piece as your funds permit.

 

You can also substitute items. A feminine napkin makes a very good trauma pad – add some medical tape, super glue and duct tape and you have a makeshift trauma pack.

 

It is cheaper to build your own rather than buy a pre-made one. But for many of us building our own kit is not practical due to time, lack of experience or training, so if you need a kit NOW – consider one or more of the kits below.
How do I choose an Emergency First Aid Kit and Supplies?
There five factors that influence what kind of first aid items you will have in your first aid kits:

 

Time – Time is life in a medical emergency. If you don't expect a paramedic to show up for an hour – your kit is going to look a lot different than a 15 minute bag. If you are planning on holding out 24 to 72 hours in an emergency, the kit needs even more supplies. The kit gets huge if you need to survive a hurricane or extended disaster or you are out in the middle of nowhere waiting on extraction.
Usage – Some people want a full surgery kit, others want enough to keep someone alive until help arrives. Do you have dangerous, snakes, ticks or spiders? Are you preparing supplies to be a midwife? Will you have trauma gear for a gunshot wound or sucking chest wound? Or gear for burns? Are you including dental supplies? Glasses repairs? What event(s) are you preparing for?
Weight – Camping, hiking and other similar activities drive a focus on weight. If this is the issue, tiny/lightweight multi-function items are your goal and you will probably be willing to pay more to get the lighter weight. Large comprehensive bags weigh a lot.
Funds – It is easy to spend hundreds if not thousands on medical kits, so money can be a limit. Know your need and focus on training first.
Skills – Even if you have answers to the four items above, you still may not have the skills to appropriately use and maintain supplies. Training is a big part of a first aid kit. So if you can, you need an extra kit to train with.
No single kit will meet all your needs. That said, we identify a few of the better ones, plus a few higher quality empty bags, kits, backpacks and duffel bags that would be good if you want to build your own.

 

You could also buy a backpack and build specialty kits, such as: an every day “boo-boo kit for nicks, cuts, and scratches; a bug/snake bit kit; a trauma kit; a burn kit; a CPR kit and so on. For the more advanced responders, you could include a suture/surgery kit, an airway kit, and so on.