Contact our office:

(503) 765-7615
logistics@crisis-medicine.com

Login
Crisis Medicine
  • Solutions
    • Training for Law Enforcement
    • Training for Fire & EMS
    • Training for Private Citizens
    • Training for EDC
    • Training For Faith Communities
    • Training For Teachers
  • Courses
    • TCCC & TECC Courses Online
    • In-Person Training Calendar
    • Which Course is right for me?
    • Student Reviews
  • Company
    • About Crisis Medicine
    • Agency Pricing
    • Contact
    • CM in the Media
    • Disclosures – None
    • Lessons Learned in Blood
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Learn
    • New
    • Quick Tips
    • MARCH
      • (S) Security & Awareness
      • (M) Massive Hemorrhage
      • (A) Airway
      • (R) Respiration
      • (C) Circulation
      • (H) Hypothermia Prevention
    • Everything Else
    • Equipment
    • Improvised
    • K9 TECC/TCCC
    • Air Travel Emergencies
    • Tactical CBRN
      • Tactical-CBRN Journal Watch
    • Planning Your IFAK
  • Store

Improvised

Home - Articles - Improvised - Page 2
Showing 7-12 of 17 results

It’s always better to have proven, dedicated medical equipment in an emergency. But when you don’t, you improvise.

At some point in your life, you will be someplace where you simply won’t have dedicated equipment available. In Army Special Forces, there is a PACE mnemonic used in planning: What’s the Primary plan? The Alternate plan? The Contingency plan? The Emergency plan?  The Emergency Plan is sometimes referred to as the “Everything went to shit plan.”

If you have a fire in your house, it’s best to use a fire extinguisher to attempt to put it out while waiting for the fire department. However, you’ll settle for a bucket of water if you have to, rather than standing back watching the fire get out of control and potentially burn down your house.

Improvised techniques can save lives. The more you begin to see improvised equipment in your everyday surroundings, the quicker you’ll be able to respond and save a life without dedicated equipment.

The techniques posted here have some evidence and proof of concept to support their use in an emergency when better materials simply aren’t available. 

An improvise tourniquet properly applied high and tight on a thigh
Mike Shertz MD/18D

Improvised Tourniquets: Good to have an alternate plan

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories (M) Massive Hemorrhage, Improvised

🕖 Reading Time, 4 minutes Critics of improvised tourniquets say they are ineffective. Some claim, “if you’re planning to improvise, you’re planning to fail.”  We disagree with this statement. Proper planning includes having a primary plan, in this instance a …

Read More
a conga line of 12 students all place improvised tourniquets on themselves, and all 12 are successful as proven by doppler ultrasound
Mike Shertz MD/18D

Improvised Tourniquets- 12 of 12 Successful

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories (M) Massive Hemorrhage, Improvised

Proven commercially available tourniquets are always our first choice. 🕖 Reading Time, 3 minutes Though many say improvised tourniquets don’t work, 12 students in a recent class all successfully made them work, when using appropriate materials, verified by Doppler ultrasound. …

Read More
Dr. Shertz demonstrates how to use a common pen as a surgical airway when you need to improvise
Mike Shertz MD/18D

Seat of Your Pants Surgical Airway

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories (A) Airway, Improvised

Emergency cricothyrotomy 🕖 Reading Time, 2 minutes Although dedicated medical equipment is always preferred, if the only thing that is going to keep someone from dying is a creative solution, you better get creative. Using everyday items, including a Zebra …

Read More
a photo of Dr. Shertz kneeling in a groin crease to stop blood flow as proven by doppler ultrasound
Mike Shertz MD/18D

Distal Hemorrhage Control: Can’t I just kneel on his groin?

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories (M) Massive Hemorrhage, Improvised

Kneeling on the casualty’s groin for distal hemorrhage control When I was in the Special Forces Medical Sergeants course a very long time ago, I was taught a stopgap measure…

Read More
Never underestimate the power of an improvised litter to make moving casualties easier. This technique works best in residential structures because in many commercial buildings, the carpet is not "wall to wall" but rather individual squares,
Mike Shertz MD/18D

Carpet to improvised litter in 60-seconds

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories Casualty Movement, Improvised

Never underestimate the power of an improvised litter to make moving casualties easier. This technique works best in residential structures because in many commercial buildings, the carpet is not “wall…

Read More
Carrying casualties is hardworking. In this video from an in-person class, students carry each other on folding chairs
Mike Shertz MD/18D

Use tools to carry casualties

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories Casualty Movement, Improvised

Moving casualties is always hard. 🕖 Reading Time, 1 minutes Use a tool whenever possible. Even a folding chair makes it easier to carry casualties quickly and over distance. Humans are hard to carry. They do not fit into our …

Read More
  • <
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • >

Featured Courses

Tactical Casualty Care – ONLINE

Tactical Casualty Care – ONLINE

$150.00
Advanced TC2 – ONLINE

Advanced TC2 – ONLINE

$395.00
Complete TC2  -ONLINE

Complete TC2 -ONLINE

$595.00
Improvised TECC/TCCC

Improvised TECC/TCCC

$125.00
K9 Tactical Casualty Care for Humans  – ONLINE

K9 Tactical Casualty Care for Humans – ONLINE

$75.00
Tactical CBRN Casualty Care – ONLINE

Tactical CBRN Casualty Care – ONLINE

$225.00
First Receivers – No Notice MCI Events – ONLINE

First Receivers – No Notice MCI Events – ONLINE

$175.00
Air Travel Emergencies – ONLINE

Air Travel Emergencies – ONLINE

$175.00
Sign up for updates
Our privacy policy can be found at https://www.crisis-medicine.com/privacy-policy/
Loading

The short version of the Crisis Medicine logo showing a C and M with an arrow in between the two

DUNS: 093140133

CAGE: 8U3A3

Company

  • About Us
  • Disclosures – None
  • Contributors
  • Contact

Courses

  • Online
  • In-Person
  • Content Warning
  • FAQs

Fine Print

  • Terms
  • Privacy Policy
  • Scope of Practice
  • FAQs

Resources

  • N. Amer. Rescue
  • TacMed Solutions
  • Chinook Medical
  • Skedco
  • Wound Cube

©2025 Crisis Medicine, all rights reserved.

  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Sitemap

Login with your site account

Lost your password?