Thank you, Kathy for your support and for taking on that mantle at your work office.
Antonio, Thank you for your thorough feedback.
Don't worry, I only discarded expired consumables. The instant hand sanitizer packs expired earlier this year, the 2-3 iodine antiseptic towelettes expired in September last year, and the "Bactrine" spray expired in 2023. Even though those are technically all antiseptics, I don't think we can rely on their "cleaning" capabilities to withstand the test of time.
I also noticed that the stop the bleed pack is a comprehensive torniquet kit, which can be good, but must be used properly.
I do understand the idea of not wanting a generic $319 kit for cases that might not be relevant to the lab. If I was to pick and chose, i would prioritize a lot of gauze dressing, some rolls of bandages, antiseptics/antibiotics, BZK wipes, eye care and wound wash. Now for the medications, these are the ones that must be stored properly and renewed more often. As much as I understand the idea that they are meant for people to administer it to themselves, I'm not sure I agree that having them is a good idea.
For the AED, every second counts. In a cardiac arrest situation, you can't only rely on the fire department arriving within less than their expected 4 minutes. there could traffic, there could be other calls, and the longer a brain is left without oxygen, the more damage it takes, lowering the change of a full, or any, recovery. AEDs are meant to be able to be used by anyone, as long as they use the instructions right. In case of emergency, a wrong action is preferred over no action. The reason I'm saying all of that is to justify the fact that AEDs are important and do help save lives.
I'm happy to keep on discussing this whether here or offline.
As a summary:
1. I'm ok with only getting the supplies we need, as long as we think through it right
2. AEDs, even without training help save lives as we cannot always rely on the fire department arriving within 4 minutes.
Also, especially considering the existing free resources (e.g. CERT Basic training, maybe Red Cross or AHA if they have a non-profit version), all members should be at least trained in first aid and CPR, and each guest should be shown the first aid kit location and contents on their first visit. It is also my opinion that a yearly refresher of knowing where the kit is and what it contains and what it is for would be a strong practice. I'm happy to take on that duty now that I've moved to Mesa and become a member, safety and security are very important to me and I'd love to spearhead that project.
Additionally, to reply to your other comment, Antonio, I haven't seen, but it would be a good idea to have an item use and disposal log or form for when important items are used and/or disposed of so that they can be replenished. I know it's extra paperwork, but that's how you justify budgets for consumables.
Sorry for such a long message, but I hope I answered all of your concerns.
Happy to discuss more.
JJ