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Kits médicos corporativos/escolares/de acceso público

Evidence-Based Selection
CoTCCC Aligned
98% Effectiveness
SDVOSB Certified
500+ Agencies
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MEDTAC0012

North American Rescue

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Tactical Medical Solutions

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$249.99

ZZ-0822

North American Rescue

MED-TAC International's Corporate & School Medical Kits collection provides OSHA-compliant, trauma-capable first aid solutions for offices, K–12 schools, universities, and commercial facilities. From wall-mounted AED companion kits to active-shooter response stations and multi-person trauma cabinets, every kit is clinician-configured and sourced directly from manufacturers. Built for the environments where civilian hemorrhage control is needed most.

What Medical Kits Do OSHA and Schools Require?

OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 requires employers to ensure the ready availability of medical personnel and first aid supplies adequate for the hazards present in the workplace. For most office and school environments, this means a stocked first aid cabinet accessible within 3–4 minutes of any employee or student. State education codes add requirements for schools — including epinephrine auto-injectors, CPR/AED access, and in many states, bleeding control stations following active-shooter preparedness mandates. The kits in this collection exceed baseline OSHA requirements and are configured to the American College of Surgeons Stop the Bleed standards for hemorrhage-capable public access kits.

How Do Corporate and School Trauma Kits Differ from Standard First Aid Kits?

A traditional ANSI-compliant first aid kit covers minor wounds — bandages, antiseptics, and over-the-counter analgesics. Corporate and school trauma kits add critical hemorrhage control capability: a CoTCCC-recommended tourniquet, hemostatic gauze, a pressure dressing, and nitrile gloves. Following the Hartford Consensus and TECC (Tactical Emergency Casualty Care) guidelines for civilian mass casualty environments, MED-TAC's institutional kits are designed for untrained bystanders to use effectively during the first minutes before EMS arrival — when survivable deaths from extremity hemorrhage are most preventable. Browse the full range of Bleeding Control Kits and Public Access Bleeding Control Kits for wall-mount options.

What Kit Configurations Are Available for Offices and Schools?

Kit Type Best For Typical Capacity Trauma Capable
Wall-Mount Bleeding Control Station Schools, public buildings, lobbies 1–2 person response Yes — tourniquet + gauze
Multi-Person Trauma Cabinet Large offices, warehouses, factories 5–10 person response Yes — multiple devices
ANSI-Plus First Aid Kit Small offices, classrooms 25–50 person facility Basic trauma additions
Active Shooter Response Kit Schools, government buildings Mass casualty response Yes — MCI capable

How Many First Aid Kits Does an Office or School Need?

OSHA guidance suggests one first aid kit per floor or work area, with response time as the governing metric — no worker should be more than 3–4 minutes from supplies. For schools, the National Association of School Nurses recommends one health office with a trained nurse per 750 students for elementary, 1,000 for secondary — but supplemental bleeding control stations distributed throughout the building dramatically improve response to mass casualty events. A standard rule of thumb for trauma stations: one per 250 occupants, or one per floor in multi-story buildings, placed near high-traffic zones (cafeterias, gymnasiums, main corridors). Quantity discounts and bulk procurement are available for institutional buyers at MED-TAC — contact us through the Custom First Aid Kits page.

Are These Kits Compliant with Active Shooter Preparedness Programs?

Yes. The kits in this collection align with the ALICE Training Institute recommendations and the FEMA TECC guidelines for civilian active-threat environments. The Hartford Consensus (THREAT protocol: Threat suppression, Hemorrhage control, Rapid Extrication, Assessment, Transport to Care) identifies hemorrhage control as the primary life-saving intervention available to bystanders during an active-shooter event. FEMA's Guide to Developing High-Quality Emergency Operations Plans for Houses of Worship and similar institutional frameworks cite bleeding control station placement as a standard preparedness measure. See also our Mass Casualty Incident & Active Shooter Kits collection for larger-scale response options.

Equip Your Facility for Real Emergencies

Clinician-configured kits for offices, schools, and public buildings — sourced from authorized manufacturers.

Frequently Asked Questions

What OSHA standard governs workplace first aid kits?+
OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 requires employers to provide first aid supplies and ensure that trained personnel are available in the absence of an infirmary, clinic, or hospital near the worksite. ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 is the voluntary standard that specifies minimum first aid kit contents by workplace type and risk level. Many employers supplement ANSI requirements with trauma-capable bleeding control supplies following the American College of Surgeons' recommendations, especially in states that have enacted school bleeding control legislation.
Do schools legally need bleeding control kits?+
An increasing number of states have enacted legislation requiring schools to stock bleeding control kits and train staff in hemorrhage control. States including Texas, Florida, Colorado, and New Jersey have passed or are advancing such laws. Even without a mandate, the American College of Surgeons and the National Association of School Nurses recommend proactive adoption. Publicly accessible bleeding control stations are now considered standard practice in school safety planning across the country.
Can untrained employees or teachers use these kits?+
Yes — that is the design intent. Public access kits use simple instructional inserts with visual guides for tourniquet application and wound packing. The Stop the Bleed program, developed by the American College of Surgeons and backed by the White House, trains lay responders in 2-hour courses to use these exact tools. Most major kit manufacturers include illustrated instruction cards for each device. MED-TAC recommends pairing kit placement with a Stop the Bleed training session for maximum preparedness.
How often should corporate and school kits be inspected?+
OSHA requires first aid supplies to be checked regularly to ensure contents are complete and usable. ANSI Z308.1 recommends inspection at least annually, or immediately after any use. Most institutions establish a monthly visual check and a comprehensive annual restock. Trauma components — hemostatic gauze, tourniquets, and dressings — should be checked for packaging integrity and expiration dates. MED-TAC carries individual replacement components for all kits so restocking does not require purchasing an entirely new unit.
Do you offer quantity pricing for school districts or corporate accounts?+
Yes. MED-TAC International works with school districts, municipalities, corporate facilities managers, and government procurement officers for volume orders. We are SDVOSB-certified and listed on GSA-approved vendor networks. Contact us directly through the Custom First Aid Kits page to discuss quantity pricing, custom labeling, kit configuration, and bulk shipping for multi-site deployments. We ship from Pembroke Pines, FL with same-day or next-day processing on most stock orders.
What is the Hartford Consensus and why does it matter for schools?+
The Hartford Consensus is a joint initiative by the American College of Surgeons and FEMA following the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting, developed to reduce preventable deaths from mass casualty events. It established the THREAT protocol and placed hemorrhage control on equal footing with fire preparedness in school and public building safety planning. The consensus directly led to the Stop the Bleed campaign and widespread adoption of bleeding control stations in schools, stadiums, airports, and public venues. It provides the clinical and policy framework that MED-TAC's institutional kits are built around.

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

Trusted by professionals across law enforcement, EMS, and corporate safety programs.

500+
Law Enforcement
250+
EMS Departments
1000+
Corporate Programs
50K+
Individuals Trained
CoTCCC Aligned
Current Guidelines
Stop the Bleed
Partner Program
SDVOSB Certified
Veteran-Owned Business
SAM Registered
Federal Contractor
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