Bleeding Control for Schools
A school is a campus full of people and a finite number of staff, where help is minutes away at best. The same public-access bleeding-control logic that protects venues and workplaces applies directly: place simple, effective hemorrhage-control kits where injuries happen, and train the adults who are already there. The cause may be a playground accident, a shop-class injury, or violence — the response to catastrophic bleeding is the same.
Building a campus program
| Element | Detail |
| Classroom kits | A bleeding control kit in every room or zone, near the door for grab-and-go |
| Staff training | Teachers and staff who know how to apply a tourniquet under stress |
| Integration | Bleeding control written into the emergency plan alongside lockdown and evacuation |
What goes in a classroom kit
- A CoTCCC-recommended tourniquet — the highest-impact tool, usable with minimal training.
- Hemostatic gauze and a pressure dressing — for wounds a tourniquet can't reach.
- Gloves and clear instructions — so any staff member can act.
Equipping a campus? Put bleeding control in every classroom and train your staff. The
classroom readiness guide walks through it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do schools need bleeding control kits?
Because catastrophic bleeding can kill within minutes — faster than EMS can arrive — and schools have many people and few responders. Staff equipped and trained to stop bleeding close a critical gap, whether the cause is an accident or violence.
What goes in a classroom bleeding control kit?
A CoTCCC-recommended tourniquet, hemostatic gauze, a pressure dressing, gloves, and clear instructions — a simple, effective set a teacher or staff member can use with minimal training.
Do teachers need training to use these kits?
The tools are designed for use with minimal instruction, but a short bleeding-control course is strongly recommended so staff can act quickly and confidently under stress. Training is a core part of a school program.
Where should school bleeding control kits be placed?
One in every classroom or zone, positioned near the door for grab-and-go access, and integrated into the school's emergency plan alongside lockdown and evacuation procedures.
Is this the same as a Stop the Bleed program?
It follows the same public-access bleeding-control principles — equipping and training the people on scene to control hemorrhage. MED-TAC supplies the bleeding control kits and components that make a campus program work.
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