Published Mar 2, 2008
JoshuaAdamsRN
67 Posts
Ok, here's the deal.
I was mocked by my new colleagues for having sissy trauma shears the other day. Truthfully, they were good once but have gone so dull that they could barely cut a bubba lady's panties and corset. So where could I order some freakin' macho trauma shears?
flightnurse2b, LPN
1 Article; 1,496 Posts
have you tried the smith and wesson's heavy duty sheers? i have a couple pair of those and they are spectacular.
Blee O'Myacin, BSN, RN
721 Posts
jadamsrn said:Ok, here's the deal.I was mocked by my new colleagues for having sissy trauma shears the other day. Truthfully, they were good once but have gone so dull that they could barely cut a bubba lady's panties and corset. So where could I order some freakin' macho trauma shears?
Hmm.. the free ones from the drug reps always worked for me, and I've never been sad when they fall into the toilet when I forget that I've jammed them into the back waistband of my pants...
Maybe your macho trauma shears will have a built in laser sight... that would be sweet....
Blee
sjt9721, BSN, RN
706 Posts
The best? Any pair that has a drug name on the handle and are free!
Larry77, RN
1,158 Posts
Ok...I'm a bit of an equipment snob...I love my 70$ trauma shears from Big Shears
People make fun of me but who do they ask for scissors from when they have to cut heavy duty clothes off of a patient?
One bad thing about these shears is that they are very heavy compared to the basic trauma/utility shears. They make a holster but I did not buy one because I use my cargo pockets of my aviator scrubs which are buff and hold them fine and I have my stethoscope in the opposite pocket so it balances my pants out.
I have cut many leather pants, football pads and wet-suits off with these and I probably could remove digits if needed :)
If the guy from Bigshears is reading this I'll take my kickback now...lol
HYPEractiveTTU
46 Posts
I cosign Larry's endorsement of bigshears. They are definitely not sissy. They are the Chuck Norris of trauma shears.
rlgiv
31 Posts
I am using yellow Avelox shears and they are better than anything I have ever actually bought.
cccnurse
20 Posts
rlgiv said:I am using yellow Avelox shears and they are better than anything I have ever actually bought.
Avelox Shears!!!
Oh man am I jealous. All we get from Avelox is boxes of antibiotics, and an occasional banana bread from Tim Horton's.
Well I can't talk too bad about the banana bread... I almost got to see a smackdown over the banana bread once between the nurses and the doc... that was fun.
cccnurse said:Avelox Shears!!!Oh man am I jealous. All we get from Avelox is boxes of antibiotics, and an occasional banana bread from Tim Horton's.Well I can't talk too bad about the banana bread... I almost got to see a smackdown over the banana bread once between the nurses and the doc... that was fun.
They give us pens to........and badge holders.......donuts but, bannana bread would really be special.
northshore08
257 Posts
I usually carry the mini version of the usual ER trauma shears, but I don't like them very much. They are okay for basic trimming of cast stuff or bandage cutoff. When the real cuttin' has to happen, most places I have worked have a large drug-rep-related pair hanging in the trauma room or at the nurses station--sometimes attached to the department's oxygen tank key or another bulky item to prevent it from "growing legs."
I'm getting ready to work some on the North Shore, so I am thinking about the wetsuit issue. The good ol' boys where I worked last wore a lot of biker leather and boots. Might have to try those bigshears--I will mention your name, larry77!
Jennifer, RN
226 Posts
I agree with some of the previous posters that the best shears are free. I have lost too many in the heat of a trauma or critical alert to ever want to pay for another pair.
Emergency RN
544 Posts
Benchmade Rescue Hook model 7 (~ $30)
http://www.benchmade.com/products/7
See video: http://7hook.benchmade.com/
But of course, nothing beats free, LOL...