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MED-TAC International's Range Safety Trauma Kits are purpose-built for shooting ranges, training facilities, and Range Safety Officers — addressing the specific injury profile of ballistic wounds, powder burns, and high-velocity fragment injuries. From compact RSO belt kits to wall-mounted range trauma stations, these kits apply CoTCCC-informed hemorrhage control to the high-velocity, high-consequence environment of an active range.
Why Do Shooting Ranges Need Dedicated Trauma Kits?
Gunshot wounds are among the most time-critical traumatic injuries — high-velocity projectiles produce tissue destruction far exceeding the bullet's diameter, with rapid hemorrhage from major vessels being the primary life-threatening mechanism. In a range environment, injuries can occur from accidental discharges, ricochet events, and catastrophic firearm failures. EMS response times to rural ranges can exceed 15–20 minutes, making on-site trauma capability essential. Ranges that serve law enforcement, military, and armed civilian training have an ethical and, in some jurisdictions, legal obligation to maintain functional trauma response capability. The NSSF and many state range safety organizations recommend staged trauma kits as a baseline safety requirement for all operational ranges. A range-specific trauma kit differs from a generic first aid kit in its focus: CoTCCC-recommended tourniquets, hemostatic gauze, chest seals, and pressure dressings take priority over bandages and antiseptic wipes.
What Should Every Range Trauma Kit Contain?
A minimum-viable range trauma kit for a firing line station or RSO belt kit should include: two CoTCCC-recommended tourniquets (CAT Gen 7 or SAM XT), two packages of z-fold hemostatic gauze (QuikClot Combat Gauze or equivalent), two pressure dressings (Israeli Emergency Bandage or OLAES), two vented chest seals (HyFin or SAM Chest Seal — ballistic wounds frequently involve thoracic penetration), nitrile gloves (two pairs minimum), trauma shears, and a permanent marker for tourniquet time documentation. Wall-mounted range trauma stations for bay or line use should contain double the minimum quantities plus a SAM splint, emergency blanket, and a nasopharyngeal airway kit. For ranges hosting law enforcement or military qualification courses, a more comprehensive kit aligned with TCCC standards is appropriate — see the full IFAK Kits and Casualty Response Kits collections.
| Kit Type | Intended Use | Key Contents | Range Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| RSO Belt Kit | Personal carry for Range Safety Officer | 2x CAT, hemostatic gauze, pressure dressing, gloves | All range types |
| Line Station Kit (Wall-Mount) | Fixed kit at each bay or firing line station | Tourniquets, gauze, chest seals, shears, marker | Indoor/outdoor range bays |
| Range Master Response Bag | Comprehensive response kit for range staff | Full MARCH kit, airway, NPA, splinting, blanket | LE/military qualification ranges |
| Vehicle Trauma Kit | Staged in range vehicle or safety truck | Extended kit with litter, cervical collar, AED | Outdoor multi-bay facilities |
What Is the Range Safety Officer's Role in Trauma Response?
The Range Safety Officer (RSO) is the designated first responder for any range emergency — they are responsible for ceasing fire, securing the scene, and initiating immediate trauma care until EMS arrives. NSSF range safety training and many state-level RSO certification programs now include hemorrhage control as a required competency alongside firearms safety and range operations. An RSO equipped with a belt-mounted trauma kit containing CoTCCC-recommended tourniquets and hemostatic gauze can initiate lifesaving hemorrhage control within 30–60 seconds of recognizing an injury — before EMS is even notified. MED-TAC strongly recommends pairing any range trauma kit purchase with a Stop the Bleed or TCCC Responder course for all range staff. MED-TAC's broader catalog includes training kits and manikins and task trainers for RSO hemorrhage control training.
How Do Ballistic Wounds Differ From Other Trauma?
High-velocity projectile wounds produce both a permanent wound cavity (the direct tissue displacement) and a temporary cavity (the shockwave-induced stretch beyond the bullet track). The result is tissue destruction exceeding what the entrance wound size suggests — and hemorrhage from vessels located some distance from the bullet path. Penetrating thoracic wounds (chest) from ballistic injury carry a high risk of pneumothorax, hemothorax, and cardiac tamponade — injuries requiring chest seals and potentially needle decompression rather than simple wound dressings. Extremity ballistic wounds frequently involve bone fracture, arterial laceration, and high-velocity tissue loss requiring tourniquet application at the proximal limb rather than wound-level pressure. These characteristics make ballistic wound management distinct from blunt or laceration trauma and are why range trauma kits are configured around CoTCCC hemorrhage and chest injury protocols rather than generic first aid guidelines.
Equip Your Range for the Worst-Case Scenario
RSO belt kits, line station trauma kits, and wall-mount stations — sourced from the same manufacturers trusted by military and law enforcement.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many trauma kits does a shooting range need?+
Are range trauma kits different from a regular first aid kit?+
What is the fastest way to respond to a gunshot wound on the range?+
Do range RSOs need formal trauma training?+
Should range trauma kits include AEDs?+
What chest seal is best for ballistic penetrating chest wounds?+
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All products sourced from the actual brand manufacturer or authorized master distributors. CoTCCC recommendation status verified where applicable. Ships from MED-TAC International, Pembroke Pines, FL — clinician-founded, veteran-led, SDVOSB-certified.