Chattanooga Times Free Press

A perfect first-aid kit

- Dr. Elizabeth Ko Dr. Eve Glazier

DEAR DOCTORS: What kind of a first-aid kit should I put together for a vacation? We have four children who are 4, 8, 11 and 13.

DEAR READER: With four active children running around in an unfamiliar home and in the great outdoors, it’s important to be prepared for a range of emergencie­s.

Pre-packaged kits are available for sale, or you can easily put together a kit tailored to the needs of your family. Use a waterproof container large enough to store everything you’ll need, and make a checklist to keep things organized. It’s also helpful to get local medical informatio­n from the landlord, including the location and contact informatio­n for the nearest pharmacy and urgent care center.

As for what to pack, start with any prescripti­on medication­s or products your family uses. Bring enough for the trip, plus a few extra days in case plans change. Pack prescripti­on meds in their original containers, which include the patient’s name, dosage instructio­ns and informatio­n about refills. If you’ve got spares of prescripti­on glasses, bring those along, too, just in case. If someone in the family uses a hearing aid, don’t forget extra batteries. If someone in the family has a chronic condition, such as diabetes or a serious allergy, consider a medical alert bracelet.

You’ll most likely be dealing with a range of minor medical situations. These include sunburn, insect bites, rashes, scrapes, cuts, sprains, upset stomachs, nausea, headaches, coughs and colds, and diarrhea. That means packing acetaminop­hen, ibuprofen or aspirin for pain and inflammati­on; antihistam­ines for anyone with an allergy; over-the-counter meds for nausea and motion sickness (this last one you might want to keep at the ready while driving); and also antacids for too-adventurou­s eating. Just in case, bring cold and flu meds for both children and adults.

For wound care, you’ll need an assortment of adhesive bandages, as well as antibiotic ointment for cuts, scrapes and burns. Elastic wraps, plus safety pins or other closures, will help with ankle, wrist and knee sprains. Hopefully, you won’t need them, but gauze rolls and 2- and 4-inch pads (plus adhesive tape to secure them) will take care of larger injuries. You’ll want hydrogen peroxide to clean all sizes of wounds.

In the lotion category, you’ll want to bring plenty of sunscreen, calamine lotion for run-ins with poison oak or poison ivy, hydrocorti­sone cream to deal with the itch from rashes, and aloe vera gel to soothe a sunburn. You’ll never regret packing bug spray, but, again, be sure to get products that are appropriat­e for both children and adults.

Useful tools include tweezers for splinters and bee stings, roundtippe­d scissors for cutting gauze and bandages to size, a thermomete­r, and antiseptic wipes to keep in a pocket or backpack. If anyone in the family has a severe allergy, you’ll need an EpiPen or other type of epinephrin­e auto-injector.

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