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IFAK Kit Builder - Bandages

Evidence-Based Selection
CoTCCC Aligned
98% Effectiveness
SDVOSB Certified
500+ Agencies

2 of 20 products

$4.35
$4.35

Tactical Medical Solutions

(7)
$7.95
(7)
$7.95

MEDTAC0421

Tactical Medical Solutions

Select your pressure dressing for the MED-TAC IFAK Kit Builder. This sub-category covers the bandages and wound-securing components that lock in hemostatic packing and maintain compression during casualty transport — including the Israeli Bandage (Emergency Bandage), OLAES Modular Bandage, and SWAT-T. Every IFAK build requires at minimum one pressure dressing.

What Role Does a Pressure Dressing Play in the IFAK Kit Builder?

After hemostatic gauze is packed into a wound, a pressure dressing secures the packing material and maintains sustained compression against the bleeding source during transport. In the TCCC sequence for extremity wounds without tourniquet indication, a pressure dressing may also be the primary hemorrhage control device. Selecting the right dressing depends on wound size, anatomy, and whether you need a multi-function tool (e.g., the OLAES, which integrates an ocular shield and integrated pressure bar). Browse the full dressing catalog in the Bandages & Dressings collection.

Which Pressure Dressings Are Used in Military and Law Enforcement IFAKs?

Dressing Manufacturer Key Feature Primary Use
Israeli Bandage (Emergency Bandage) PerSys Medical / Safeguard Pressure applicator bar, one-handed application General wound coverage, wound packing securement
OLAES Modular Bandage TacMed Solutions Integrated ocular shield, pressure disk, gauze reserve Multi-function; extremity, eye, and wound packing
SWAT-T Tourniquet/Pressure Dressing TEMS Solutions Dual-use: pressure dressing or improvised tourniquet Extremity bleeding, pediatric tourniquet alternative
H&H Compression Bandage H&H Medical High-stretch elastic, fast application General pressure dressing, extremity wounds

How Do I Apply an Israeli Bandage One-Handed?

The Israeli Bandage's pressure applicator bar enables one-handed application critical for self-aid: (1) place the sterile pad directly over the wound (or over packed hemostatic gauze); (2) wrap the elastic bandage around the limb or body part; (3) hook the bandage through the pressure applicator bar and fold back against the wrap to create focused pressure over the wound; (4) continue wrapping and secure with the closure clip. This design allows a wounded operator to dress a limb wound using only the non-injured hand. For wound packing securement, pair with hemostatic gauze from the IFAK Builder – Hemostatic Agents category.

Should I Carry One or Two Pressure Dressings in My IFAK?

TCCC guidelines recommend carrying at minimum two bandages in a full IFAK configuration — one to secure wound packing and one as a backup or for secondary wound coverage. Many military and law enforcement IFAKs include one Israeli Bandage (or equivalent) plus one elastic wrap (e.g., ACE-style or Israeli-style 4" bandage) for secondary coverage or splint stabilization. The OLAES is a popular single-item choice that covers multiple contingencies. Complete your IFAK with components from the Treatment Accessories sub-category for a comprehensive build.

Complete Your IFAK Build

Bandage selected — add a tourniquet, hemostatic agent, and chest seal to finish your custom IFAK.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an Israeli Bandage and why is it standard in IFAKs?+
The Israeli Bandage (officially the Emergency Bandage) was developed by an IDF medic in the 1990s and has become the global standard for pressure dressing. Its pressure applicator bar creates focused, sustained pressure over a wound without requiring a second responder. It can be applied one-handed, wraps easily around extremities and torso wounds, and integrates a sterile pad over the wound site. The design allows rapid, reliable wound closure under stress — qualities that make it a core IFAK component across military, law enforcement, and EMS.
What makes the OLAES bandage different from a standard Israeli Bandage?+
The OLAES (Objective Lightweight Adjustable Tourniquet-Emergency Bandage System) integrates multiple components: a pressure disk for targeted wound compression, an ocular shield for eye injuries, and 4 feet of internal gauze that can be removed for wound packing. The OLAES is favored by operators who want a single multi-mission dressing. The Israeli Bandage is simpler, faster to apply, and slightly more compact. For a basic IFAK, either is appropriate; the OLAES adds value when eye injury coverage is a mission consideration.
Can the SWAT-T be used as both a tourniquet and a pressure dressing?+
Yes. The SWAT-T (Stretch Wrap And Tuck Tourniquet) is designed as a dual-use device — it functions as a pressure dressing when wrapped over a wound and as an improvised tourniquet for extremity bleeding when additional occlusion pressure is required. It is particularly useful as a pediatric tourniquet alternative (standard adult tourniquets are often too large for small limbs) and for junctional/groin wound compression. It does not replace a CoTCCC-recommended tourniquet as a primary limb tourniquet but provides valuable backup capability.
What size bandage should I use — 4 inch or 6 inch?+
4-inch bandages are suitable for extremity wounds and standard adult limb coverage. 6-inch bandages provide better coverage for larger wounds, torso injuries, and obese or large-framed individuals. Many operators carry one 4-inch for primary use and one 6-inch as a secondary or for torso wound coverage. Israeli Bandages and OLAES are available in both sizes. When in doubt, 6-inch provides greater versatility — excess bandage can always be tucked away, but inadequate coverage cannot be extended.
Do pressure dressings expire?+
Sterile bandages and dressings have a shelf life of 3–5 years from manufacture date, after which sterility cannot be guaranteed. The elastic component may also degrade over time, reducing compression capability. Check the expiration date on each individual package and replace expired products. Store in a cool, dry location away from UV exposure. If the sterile packaging is compromised for any reason, replace immediately — a non-sterile dressing applied to an open wound increases infection risk.

Related Collections

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.

Why MED-TAC's Evidence-Based Approach Outperforms

Multi-brand curation means optimal performance — not vendor compromises.

Multi-Brand Curation

We select the best component from each manufacturer — not whatever a single vendor pushes.

  • Best tourniquet from Company A (98% effectiveness)
  • Superior hemostatic from Company D (clinical proven)
  • Optimized kit performance over vendor politics

Evidence-Based Selection

Components chosen based on clinical studies and field data — not marketing claims.

98%
Tourniquet Effectiveness
94%
Hemostatic Success
96%
Chest Seal Adhesion
95%
User Satisfaction

Professional Validation

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