
Self-Adhesive Wrap
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It’s difficult enough to keep your wits about you when dealing
with an emergency or injury. It’s all but impossible if you’re frantically
searching for supplies or—worse yet—you don’t have what you need on hand.
Devoting a little time to stocking and organizing your first aid kit is well
worth the effort.
Back-Up Equipment
In addition to medical supplies, you should also have spares of
anything you might need to catch, restrain, or free a trapped horse. This would
include:
• Ropes and towels for padding legs under ropes
• Wire cutters
• Hand saw
• Pocket knife
• Flashlight and extra batteries
• Extra halters and lead shanks
• Blindfold (a large towel will do)
• Horse blanket—a woolen cooler is the most versatile here
• Extra blanket clips to fasten the cooler tightly around the
horse
First Aid Supplies
You don’t have to go overboard and spend hundreds of dollars on
a kit with 1,001 items. Stick to the basic supplies you’ll need to handle the
most common problems. Small trunks or inexpensive plastic storage containers
with lids work well for keeping your supplies in one place. Store items likely
to be opened but not completely used at any one time (like paper sleeves of
gauze sponges and cotton) inside a zip-type plastic bag so you can save what’s
left over and keep it clean.
If you don’t already have one, consider investing in a
refrigerator for the barn so that you can keep frozen ice packs on hand and have
a place to store any drugs the vet might dispense that need refrigeration.
Keep all your materials for cleaning wounds inside a bucket
marked on the handle or bucket with a brightly colored tape that identifies
it for "first aid use only." Other supplies can be stored all in one place, or
separate the items used for wounds, feet, and eyes into their own storage
containers marked by a label or color-coded tape for quick
identification.
General Supplies• List of contact numbers for vet,
veterinary hospital or
school, owners if you board, insurance companies
of insured horses, and any
allergies/drug sensitivities of the
horses.
• How-to first aid book
• Thermometer
• Inexpensive stethoscope
(for taking heart rate and listening
to gut or lung sounds)
•
Scissors
• Sterile solution for cleansing
• Spiral notebook and pen (tie
the pen to the spirals) for
recording vital signs, dates, times, and
details of injuries and illnesses. This
information is invaluable to
your vet. Don’t trust your memory.
Feet
Puncture wounds, bruises, abscesses, or laminitis
are likely to
cross your path at some time or another. You will
need:
• One or two hoof boots, to protect the foot and hold
packing/poultice material in place. To get the correct size, make a
tracing of
your horse’s foot, or his shoe if he’s shod.
• Hoof pick
(keep with your first aid supplies and mark it with
colored tape in
case you borrow it when you can’t find your other one)
• Epsom salts for
soaking
• Low pans (calf-feeding dishes work well) or soaking
boots
• Poultice material
• Heavyweight plastic bags, food-storage size,
for poultices
and hoof boot storage

Sterile Gauze Pads
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WoundsAs any horse owner knows, wounds are also very
common! (See our
complete wound care story in the April 2007 issue.)
You need to be prepared to
stop the bleeding and clean, dress, and
bandage wounds when appropriate.
• Box of disposable gloves for cleaning/handling wounds
(drugstore)
• Hydrogen peroxide, for loosening heavy crust on old
wounds
• Povidone iodine, Nolvasan or chlorhexidine-based surgical
scrub (make sure you get scrub, not solution—the scrubs lather)
•
Matching povidone iodine or Nolvasan-based solution or
cream
•
Sterile 4" X 4" sponges for cleaning wounds. Lint-free towels
can be
used for this, too, like the ones sold for cleaning windshields. Never
use bulk cotton to clean an open wound. It leaves irritating fibers
behind.
• Several clean, thick, lint-free towels (or several layers of
rolled up lint-free paper towels) to use to stop bleeding. Feminine
sanitary
napkins are good for this too if the wound isn’t too large,
and they make
excellent bandages on most open wounds, while providing a
protective
cushion.
• Sterile, non-stick gauze pads to apply
directly over cleaned
wounds
• Four to 6 rolls of stretchable
self-adhesive bandage such as
Vetrap or reuseable Ace
bandages
• Extra set of leg cottons and polos, or set of all-in-one
type stable bandages with Velcro closures if you’re not confident about
your leg
wrapping skills.
• Surface wound dressings—spray on for
superficial scrapes and
minor cuts; liquid or ointment for under gauze
dressings, for example antibiotic
cream or iodine/Nolvasan-based.
| Human First-Aid Kit |
| People get hurt too! Be sure your barn is equipped with a human first aid kit that includes wound
supplies. Also keep a list of who to contact in case of an emergency and post it
in a prominent place in the barn, preferably next to the phone. |
Sprains, Strains, & Puffy Joints
• Four to six ice
packs (best anti-inflammatory and analgesic),
frozen and ready to
use
• Ace wraps or stretchy polo bandages to hold ice packs in
place
• Phenylbutazone (bute) paste (clear use with your vet
first)
Miscellaneous
If you are in a remote area, or your vet is
overworked and not
able to take emergencies rapidly, schedule an
appointment to discuss other
supplies he or she might think you should
have on hand, such as antibiotic eye
creams. Also discuss any specific
medical or lameness problems any horses in
your barn have and what you
should have on hand for those. Topical steroid or
anesthetic creams,
available at human drug stores, are great for stings, bug
bites, and
painful or itchy skin conditions until your vet can make a diagnosis
and recommend specific treatment.