

🩸 Stop the drip, keep your day on track!
BleedCEASE First Aid Sterile Packings use a natural calcium alginate polymer derived from brown seaweed to rapidly stop bleeding by releasing clotting calcium ions. Designed for quick, comfortable insertion, these sterile packings absorb blood and transform into a healing gel within 30 minutes. Ideal for nosebleeds, cuts, and scrapes, BleedCEASE offers a safe, non-irritating, and effective solution trusted by thousands.


| ASIN | B00GRL8Q5W |
| Best Sellers Rank | #26,575 in Health & Household ( See Top 100 in Health & Household ) #209 in Adhesive Bandages #2,058 in Sales & Deals |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (2,985) |
| Date First Available | November 19, 2013 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | CAT00010 |
| Manufacturer | Everready First Aid |
| Product Dimensions | 6 x 4 x 2 inches; 1.76 ounces |
L**M
Great nosebleed dressing
Great choice to stop nose bleeds. They are a little stiff so use saline nasal spray to soften a little and works great. They are all sterilely packaged and easy to open and use. Works great sets up with gel like substance so the blood stops quickly after use. Tells you to wait 30 minutes and then remove. Dependent on type of nose bleed may need to apply again. Good price for the money 25 applications in the box
D**Y
Recommend for nosebleeds
Works well
J**S
Works
Works very quickly
L**1
It works
Works as advertised. Stops the bleeds MUCH faster. Rebleeds are also reduced even AFTER the packing has been removed. I get really bad seasonal nosebleeds that just pour out whenever it wants. The bleeds just happen for no rhyme or reason. At times I sense when a torrent is coming and I can get a TP plug ready at other times it happens when I tilt my head down, smile at someone, shower or if I'm having a good day. In any case it's embarrassing for me and frightening to onlookers. These bleedcease nose packings look like beige wispy fibers all running in parallel. It doesn't look like cotton gauze at all. Its also very two-dimensional, which could pose a problem when packing it into your 3-D nostril. You gotta develop a technique that maximizes the contact area between the packing fibers and the actual bleed site. For me I create a TP torpedo that has a fore-end covered by the bleedcease. This allows me to reach deeper to the site of bleeding AND it also presses the packing against it. Thats IF I know a bleed is coming. In acute bleeds, I hold my head up, tear open a packet and shove the packing as far as I can into the nostril and pinch for about 5 minutes. Minus 1 Star. Due to packing fibers being very flat. When I first used it, it didn't work too well, eventhough I knew I was right on top of the bleed site. I realized quickly that I had to press the packing against the bleeding for the chemicals to do their thing effectively. If done right the bleeding stops in about 1/6th the time with TP and less blood swallowed 😰. Blood buggers also shorter due to stymied flow. I now pack two with me at all times, two in the wallet, two at a backup site and two more to backup the backups. <--- HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
C**R
It works
It really helps to stop nose bleeds
A**R
Don't bleed on your expensive stuff.
Works great because it contains a coagulant to stop the bleeding, and absorbs the blood so you don't bleed all over your brand-new white carpet or white leather seats. They are stored in a single-use paper package that is easy to open and carry. They can come in handy if you are on blood thinners.
B**N
A necessary aid!
Well packaged and useful
J**H
Packaging
This is a great product that I use in my ENT practice. Unfortunately the mailing package was sub optimal and product was received damaged.
C**R
Son buenas son para sangrado nasal pero también se pueden utilizar en brazos por ejemplo
D**M
These work really well for nosebleeds
S**G
Works in seconds!
B**.
Worth the money. Mum is a bleeder (in a mild way), and also has very fragile skin, so the first aid kit gets a lot of use. Mostly a gauze pad and a stick-on dressing will do the job, but if the flow of blood continues beyond what seems appropriate for the size of the wound, or if there's just too much blood, or she has a nose-bleed that won't stop, we reach for this. We don't need to use it often, but it usually works quickly when we do need it (I think the couple of times it's taken longer, it's been nosebleeds, and it's hard to get it right against the source of the blood in that situation). It's a comfort knowing it's there when it's needed - i wouldn't like to go without it now we've got accustomed to having it, as standard dressings and compression just don't always do the job, and i'd rather not have to call an ambulance for a little skin-tear. I was pleased to notice that the doctor used what she described as a "seaweed" dressing (presumably calcium alginate) on Mum after a procedure; she didn't mention a brand name, but it appeared identical. I did have to reapply the next day, that time, as there had still been a small amount of bleeding, so it's not the be-all-and-end-all, just good.
J**E
These help once the nosebleed has slowed down. The don’t stop heavy flow bleeds but are ace at stemming lower flow bleeds.