When my son was a baby I kept infant versions of MOST of the below on hand, I also now have children's versions. What I currently have in my med chest:
- Tylenol
- Ibuprofen
- Percoset
- Tylenol 2
- Imatrex (oral and injection)
- Soma (muscle relaxer)
- Midol (mild muscle relaxer)
- Ventolin (albuterol)
- Flovent
- Dexamethazone
- Flonase
- Tums
- Pepto Bismal
- Immodium
- Pseudoephedrine HCl (Sudefed from behind the counter)
- Robotussin (dextromathorphan only, guafinessen only, combo)
- Dimatapp (because kiddo hates robotussin)
- Nyquil
- Benedryl
- Epi pen (for guest emergencies)
- Cortizone (topical)
- Yeast Infection Meds (topical cream, ovules/Monistat, spray)
- Neosporin
- 1 zpack (azithromycin)
- Ipecac
- Ear thermometer
- Bandages in many forms (band-aids to ace bandages)
- Unfrozen Otterpops
When I travel (1st world countries) I have all of the above + broadspectrum antibiotics (a lot), multiple kinds of painkillers, oral antifungals, oral antiparasiticals, suture kit, couple of IV kits, GPS beacon/locator. 3rd world countries are a different ball game. Meds are often currency/ safe passage. So you bring as large a quantity of painkillers, antibiotics, & immunizations as you can carry.
Some of my friends think my "pharmacy" is extreme. I grew up in a medical household. My grandfather actually HAD a pharmacy in his house (private). When he died we had thousands of bottles, vials, powders that we had to distribute. I consider MY "pharmacy" to be basic first aid. Someone gets sick, I don't need to run to the store. If they're too sick for my med cabinet, they go to the hospital. His had everything from anesthesia & sulfa to banana bags and thorazine suppositories.