Daily Express

Knife campaigner­s call for lifesaving ‘bleed’ kits

- By Michael Knowles Home Affairs Correspond­ent

EXCLUSIVE

GIVING first-aid kits to the public and all police response units could help save the lives of stabbing victims, campaigner­s said yesterday.

Bleed-control kits, which include tourniquet­s, bandages and gels, could prevent people from bleeding to death while paramedics race to the scene.

This early interventi­on is crucial as victims with catastroph­ic injuries can die within three minutes, a nurse warned.

Policing minister Nick Hurd has written to police and crime commission­ers and organisati­ons involved in the night-time economy, asking how these packs can be rolled out more widely.

Doctors have warned that increasing numbers of people are being rushed to hospital with severe stabbing wounds, a trend described by one police chief as increasing­ly “feral”.

The interventi­on comes as police are battling against a knife-crime epidemic, with more than 250 fatal stabbings in the UK this year.

Danny O’Brien, of Anti-Knife UK, said: “These bleed-control kits should be available in every business first-aid kit, especially in areas where there are known to be incidents.

“They could stop someone bleeding to death.

“If the Government can find the Nick Hurd... in favour of the kits, which can stop bleeding after knife attacks funding, it would make a big difference. It is like a defibrilla­tor. If someone is having a heart attack and you know there is one nearby, you can go and get it.

“It would also make a difference if every police patrol had them. They are the first on the scene.”

In a written parliament­ary question, Labour MP Jess Phillips asked if the Home Office supported all police response units carrying bleed-control kits.

And Mr Hurd said he has written to organisati­ons asking them to “consider how these might be made more freely available in public places”.

Nurse Emma Hammett, CEO of First Aid for Life, said applying immediate pressure and attempting to stop the blood from flowing from an open wound are the most crucial interventi­ons in the seconds after someone has been stabbed.

She said: “You can bleed out within three minutes.

“If there is a catastroph­ic bleed – for example, if an artery has been hit and there is bright red blood squirting out of the wound – you need to stop the bleeding. Direct pressure alone won’t stop it.

“Police response units should have these kits.” certainly

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Pictures: ALAMY
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