SHEETSPLINT was invented by Rait Arro (TCCC instructor). He noticed that lightweight
splints did not provide effective immobilisation to long bone fractures, often causing secondary injuries.
Rait developed the idea with his co-founder, an industrial designer, taking cue from origami paper folding practices to create a lightweight and compact, yet a very robust splint, which can be used to immobilise all major extremity injuries.
SHEETSPLINT is used in JFAKS, ambulances, field hospitals and training centres by the Estonian
Defence Forces and the Estonian Defence League. SHEETSPLINT is currently tested by the armed forces of multiple NATO member states.
Proudly used by tactical and civilian medical responders in combat casualty care, mass casualty incident, and remote rescue operations.
Splint all major extremity injury patterns, including long bone fractures: palm, wrist, lower arm, elbow, upper arm, ankle, lower leg, knee, upper leg.
Rigidly foldable splint modules provide unmatched structural strength and offer complete immobilisation to minimise the risk of secondary injury.
Modular design allows to fold the splint kit into compact flat pack, roughly the size of a tablet. It's easy to store and lightweight to carry.