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Triangular Bandage

Posted on April 14, 2026 by Chester Canonigo Leave a Comment on Triangular Bandage

One piece of cloth. About fifteen different ways to use it.

A triangular bandage is a large piece of cloth cut in a right-angle triangle shape (The Philippine Red Cross version is 96cm x 96cm x 136cm). It is one of the most versatile items in any first aid kit… which is why it appears in almost every international and Philippine first aid kit standard.

Triangular bandages (also called muslin bandages) can be used as arm slings for fractured or injured arms, as head or scalp bandages, as improvised tourniquets when combined with a windlass, as padding around fractures, as general wound coverings for large wounds, and for securing dressings.

The Philippine Red Cross Personal First Aid and Survival Kit includes one triangular bandage (96cm x 96cm x 136cm) as standard.

What it’s used for:

  • Create an arm sling for a fractured or dislocated arm or shoulder
  • Improvised tourniquet when used with a stick or rod as a windlass
  • Large wound covering for scalp, hand, foot, or body injuries
  • Secure other dressings and bandages in place
  • Padding and support around fractures alongside a splint

Why it belongs in your emergency kit:

  • The most versatile single item in your kit… one bandage, many uses
  • Essential for arm fractures and shoulder injuries which are common in falls
  • Can substitute for multiple other items in a pinch when supplies are limited
  • Lightweight and compact… folds flat to almost nothing
  • Pairs with safety pins and gauze for complete wound and fracture management

Pros and Cons:

PROSCONS
Extremely versatile… one item serves many functionsRequires some training to apply correctly as a sling or improvised tourniquet
Lightweight and folds flat for compact storageNot sterile on its own… not suitable for direct wound contact without a sterile dressing beneath
Can be used as sling, tourniquet, dressing, pad, and moreBulkier than bandage rolls in some storage configurations
Included in Philippine Red Cross standard kitsNeeds safety pins to properly secure as a sling (which is why pins are in the kit too)
Reusable if washed and sterilized (though sterile single-use is preferred for wounds)As an improvised tourniquet it is less effective than a proper commercial tourniquet

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Author: Chester Canonigo

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