90 Piece First Aid Kit with Nylon Bag – Ice Packs, Foil Blanket, Dressings, Bandages and Gloves Included
90 Piece First Aid Kit with Nylon Bag – Ice Packs, Foil Blanket, Dressings, Bandages and Gloves Included
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Because Accidents Don't Wait for a Convenient Time
A minor cut at a campsite. A sprained ankle on a country walk. A child's scraped knee halfway through a day out. These things happen without any warning, and when they do the last thing you want is to be searching through drawers or realising you've run out of what you need. This 90-piece first aid kit puts everything in one place — organised, zipped up, and ready to open the moment something happens.
90 Items That Actually Cover Real Situations
Most basic kits give you plasters and not much else. This one goes further. Across the 90 items you get coverage for minor injuries all the way through to situations that need more — swelling that needs ice, shock or cold exposure that needs a foil blanket, larger wounds that need proper dressings, and someone else's injury that needs gloves before you touch it.
Here's what's inside:
- Plasters — multiple sizes for cuts, grazes, and fingertip injuries, the thing you reach for most often
- Dressings — multiple sizes for wounds that need more than a plaster, from medium cuts to larger injuries
- Bandages — for wrapping sprains, securing dressings, and supporting joints after an injury
- Ice Packs — instant cold packs for swelling, sprains, and bruising; most cheaper kits leave these out entirely
- Emergency Foil Blanket — for shock, heat retention in cold conditions, or serious outdoor situations where body temperature matters
- Protective Gloves — disposable gloves so you can treat someone else's wound properly without hygiene risk
The Bag Itself Is Worth Mentioning
A lot of first aid kits come in thin, lightweight cases that crack, split, or lose their zip after a few months. The nylon bag this kit comes in is a different build — harder wearing, more resistant to being knocked around in a car boot or shoved into a hiking pack. The contents stay organised inside it too, so when you need something quickly you're not emptying everything out to find one item.
Where Most People Keep One
At home — kitchen cuts, children's accidents, DIY injuries; a kit in the house means you can deal with it straight away rather than improvising with whatever you can find in the bathroom cabinet.
In the car — road trips, school runs, long drives; accidents happen away from home and this kit fits in a glovebox or sits in the boot without taking up any real space.
Travelling abroad — knowing exactly what you have with you matters when you're far from a familiar pharmacy. Pack it once and it's there every trip.
Camping and caravanning — the further you are from a pharmacy or hospital, the more a properly stocked kit matters. The ice packs and foil blanket are particularly important here.
At the office — workplaces need first aid provision and this kit provides more than most standard office setups carry.
Cycling and hiking — falls and sprains are common on trails and roads. Having this in your pack or your cycling bag means you can deal with an injury on the spot.
One Kit. Multiple Places It Belongs.
Some people buy two — one for the house, one for the car. Others take it travelling and bring it back each time. However you use it, the point is the same: having 90 items ready before you need them is worth a great deal more than scrambling around after something has already happened.
90 individual items. Durable nylon bag. Includes ice packs, emergency foil blanket, multiple-size dressings, bandages, plasters, and gloves. Suitable for home, car, office, caravan, travel, cycling, and outdoor use.
