Provided by Sheep Dog Impact Assistance - Greater Cincinnati Chapter

Written by Craig McKee, WCPO anchor

The tornadoes that hit Kentucky last December meant an emergency response from across the country. One of the teams who responded was the Cincinnati chapter of Sheep Dog Impact Assistance. While they were helping with rescue and recovery efforts in Dawson Springs, chapter commander Dave Jardon said he realized a need.

“We’ve seen the rural departments that are so underfunded,” Jardon said. “They don’t have a Band-Aid or an Aspirin in their car, let’s try to do something.”

As a result, Jardon and his team of volunteers made up of veterans and first responders decided they wanted to supply deputies with a special box packed with essential items to help them every day and when trauma strikes.

“To try to get the police perspective, we came to the Grant County Sheriff’s Department. We sat down and brainstormed with them about what kind of trauma kit do we want to see,” Jardon said.

The group now has a goal to equip every sheriff’s office in the state of Kentucky with those kits.

Jardon said they decided on hand sanitizer and basic first aid items for daily use and then a trauma pack in the event the deputy needs to treat a stab wound or gunshot wound. All of it would be packed into a plastic ammunition container for easy access.

As a result, Jardon and his team of volunteers made up of veterans and first responders decided they wanted to supply deputies with a special box packed with essential items to help them every day and when trauma strikes.

“To try to get the police perspective, we came to the Grant County Sheriff’s Department. We sat down and brainstormed with them about what kind of trauma kit do we want to see,” Jardon said.

The group now has a goal to equip every sheriff’s office in the state of Kentucky with those kits.

Jardon said they decided on hand sanitizer and basic first aid items for daily use and then a trauma pack in the event the deputy needs to treat a stab wound or gunshot wound. All of it would be packed into a plastic ammunition container for easy access.

“It could be upwards of 30-35 minutes before an ambulance could get to,” Maines said. “So it speaks volumes to know that now we’ll have the tools to go ahead and stop that bleeding or stop that chest wound and at least stabilize them until the ambulance can get there.”

Dave Jardon worked with MTM Molded Products in Dayton to create the plastic ammunition boxes for the kits. He also worked with the Freestore Foodbank in Cincinnati to gather the hand sanitizers for the kit.

Each trauma kit costs $65 to create and the Cincinnati chapter of Sheep Dog Impact Assistance works off donations to make this possible. If you’d like to donate you can visit their Facebook page.

This story originally appeared on WCPO.com.

WCPO is ABC's Cincinnati affiliate and a content-sharing partner of LINK nky.