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We help families and caregivers find the right mobility, comfort, and home-safety solutions with clear guidance, curated essentials, and simple tools to make care at home easier.

Emergency-and-First-Aid-Essentials getMovility

Emergency and First Aid Essentials

Emergency & First Aid Essentials for Prompt, Effective Response

getMovility curates practical emergency and first aid essentials so caregivers, seniors, and first responders can act quickly and confidently. From CPR masks and ID tags to extrication collars, straps, rescue blankets, and lights—every item is selected for reliability, clarity, and ease of use.

Take the CareMatch Quiz to build a kit matched to your household, mobility, and travel needs.

  • ✓ Clear, easy instructions
  • ✓ Durable, field-tested designs
  • ✓ Home, vehicle & workplace ready
  • ✓ Secure checkout

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How to Choose

  • Setting: Home & vehicle kits cover CPR, bleeding control, and exposure; workplaces may add collars, straps, and signaling lights.
  • Visibility: Choose bright emergency lights for low-light scenes; carry reflective blankets for warmth and signaling.
  • Ease of use: Prioritize one-way valve CPR masks, quick-release straps, and clearly labeled ID tags.

Want a kit that fits your routine? CareMatch recommends essentials for home, car, or caregiver bags.

Customers say: “The CPR mask and rescue blanket fit perfectly in our go-bag—simple, compact, and reliable.” — ★★★★★

Emergency & First Aid — FAQs

What’s the difference between a CPR pocket mask and a face shield?

Pocket masks create a better seal and often include a one-way valve and O2 inlet; face shields are ultra-compact barriers for basic protection.

How do I pick the right extrication collar size?

Use brand sizing instructions (typically based on neck length/height). When in doubt, choose adjustable models and follow training guidance.

When should I use a rescue foil blanket?

Use for warmth after exposure, shock, or while awaiting transport. It reflects body heat and offers wind/rain protection.

What should every basic kit include?

CPR barrier, gloves, bandage materials, antiseptic, thermal blanket, light, ID/medical info, and any personal medications per clinician advice.

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