Running late myself... but a few things
NAR makes the IPOK, it's small, lightweight, and fairly inexpensive. If you're not a medic, I would push you to have a "buddy aid" kit, meaning, a kit your buddy (or a medic) can use on you. With my shooting group, trying to get people to go out and spend money on something necessary is exceptionally difficult, even though we've done a lot of night shoots, people would still show up with no weapon light. The IPOK has kinda become the go-to: It's unitary (Just buy this), it's inexpensive (~$50), it has most of what you need.
To borrow something from what @Post Car wrote... Airways. The NPAs for whatever reason are fairly pricey, but OPAs are much cheaper. Since you need to have the correct "size" for the person it's being used on, I would just buy the large selection of OPAs, and when we'd do a medical day, anyone who didn't have one, could just grab one out of the box and rubber-band it to their IPOK/Kit whatever they had.
I also usually keep a larger FAK on hand, this has the more basic stuff... asprin, advil, bandaids, creams, icepacks etc. The worse we've had to deal with was a minor twisted ankle.
NAR makes the IPOK, it's small, lightweight, and fairly inexpensive. If you're not a medic, I would push you to have a "buddy aid" kit, meaning, a kit your buddy (or a medic) can use on you. With my shooting group, trying to get people to go out and spend money on something necessary is exceptionally difficult, even though we've done a lot of night shoots, people would still show up with no weapon light. The IPOK has kinda become the go-to: It's unitary (Just buy this), it's inexpensive (~$50), it has most of what you need.
To borrow something from what @Post Car wrote... Airways. The NPAs for whatever reason are fairly pricey, but OPAs are much cheaper. Since you need to have the correct "size" for the person it's being used on, I would just buy the large selection of OPAs, and when we'd do a medical day, anyone who didn't have one, could just grab one out of the box and rubber-band it to their IPOK/Kit whatever they had.
I also usually keep a larger FAK on hand, this has the more basic stuff... asprin, advil, bandaids, creams, icepacks etc. The worse we've had to deal with was a minor twisted ankle.