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Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE — ANSI/OSHA Compliant
Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE — ANSI/OSHA Compliant

CPR Savers & First Aid Supply Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit Review (2026)

Is the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit worth adding to your first aid kit?

Short answer: Yes — but only for the job it's actually built for. The CPR Savers & First Aid Supply Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit restocks the medication compartment of a first aid kit — single-dose OTC medication packets like pain relievers and antihistamines — and nothing else. It is not a wound-care refill, so don't buy it expecting bandages or gauze. Pair it with a wound-care refill such as the SuccorWare 90-Piece Wound Care Refill or the First Aid Only 90583 25-Person Refill and you've covered both halves of a kit at once.

Most first aid refills focus on the visible half of a kit — bandages, gauze, antiseptic wipes — and quietly ignore the medication compartment until it's empty. The CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit exists to close that specific gap: a low-cost, single-purpose reorder for the medication side of the box. This review covers where it sits in the First Aid Kit Refills collection, which kits from the First Aid Kits collection it's a natural pairing for, and when a different refill — or a second refill alongside it — is the smarter buy.

Editorial verdict: 4.1/5. At $12.95, the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit is a cheap, focused way to restock the medication side of a kit — it just isn't, and shouldn't be mistaken for, a full-kit refill.

VIEW ON WC SAFETY → CHECK PRICE ON AMAZON →

As an Amazon Associate, WC Safety earns from qualifying purchases. Prices and availability are accurate as of the date shown and are subject to change. Full affiliate disclosure.

Pros

  • Restocks the one compartment most wound-care refills skip: single-dose OTC medication packets
  • Cheap, low-commitment add-on at $12.95 — easy to reorder alongside a bigger restock
  • Single-dose packaging keeps a kit's medication section tidy and easy to hand out
  • Pairs cleanly with any wound-care refill regardless of brand
  • From CPR Savers, a name buyers will already recognize from CPR mask and rescue supply purchases

Cons

  • Medication packets only — no bandages, gauze, or wound dressings included
  • No stated ANSI Z308.1 class, so it can't be mapped to a Class A/B checklist line item on its own
  • Tiny next to a full medication-inclusive reload like the UniShield Class B refill
  • Listing doesn't itemize exact medication types or packet counts, so confirm contents before ordering

Who the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit is for

  • Safety coordinators who already restocked wound care with a SuccorWare wound care refill or a similar pack and now need the medication compartment topped up separately.
  • Facilities teams running a modular restock routine — wound care and medication as two separate reorders rather than one bundled purchase.
  • Anyone whose kit's bandages are fine but whose pain-reliever and antihistamine packets have run out or expired.
  • Buyers who don't want to overbuy — a small, cheap top-up instead of a $170 medication-inclusive Class B reload for a kit that doesn't need one.

What the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit does well

It solves the one gap a wound-care refill leaves behind

Refills like the First Aid Only 90583 and the General Medi 160-Piece Refill Bag are built around bandages, gauze, and antiseptic — the wound-care side of a kit. Medication is usually an afterthought or missing entirely. The CPR Savers pack is built to be the other half of that reorder: single-dose OTC medication packets sized for a kit's medication compartment, ordered on its own line item.

Single-dose packaging keeps distribution simple

Packaging medication in individual, single-dose packets rather than a shared bottle matters for a shared first aid kit — no bottle to track, no dosing decisions to make on the fly, and no cross-contamination concern from a communal container. That format is standard across the medication-refill category, from this pack up to the larger UniShield Class B Refill with Medications.

Cheap enough to be a routine reorder, not a decision

At $12.95, this is one of the lowest-friction line items in the First Aid Kit Refills collection. It sits in the same price band as the SuccorWare wound care refill ($12.99) and the General Medi refill bag ($11.93), so adding it to an existing restock order barely moves the total.

A recognizable name in the rescue-supply space

CPR Savers is a brand buyers are more likely to already know from CPR and rescue equipment than from wound care — see the CPR and Rescue Supplies collection for the rest of the category, including the WNL CPR Rescue Mask with Hard Case. That brand familiarity is a small but real trust signal for a category where labeling and sourcing matter.

Where the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit falls short

It is not a full-kit refill

This is the single most important thing to understand before buying: the pack restocks medication packets only. It will not refill bandages, gauze, tape, or antiseptic. Buyers expecting a general-purpose refill after reading "first aid supply" in the name should instead look at the First Aid Only 90583 or the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill, both reviewed on our Urgent First Aid Class A Refill review.

No stated ANSI class

Unlike the Class A and Class B refills in our catalog, this pack carries no ANSI/ISEA Z308.1 class designation. OTC medication packets are a common supplementary item in workplace kits, but they are not part of the ANSI Z308.1 minimum-fill checklist itself, so this refill can't be used to check a compliance box the way a Class A or Class B refill can. See our OSHA first aid kit requirements explained reference for what the ANSI minimum list actually requires.

Small scale next to a medication-inclusive full reload

For a 50-person Class B cabinet that needs both wound care and medication restocked in one purchase, the UniShield ANSI Class B Refill with Medications does that in a single $169.95 order. This pack is the right buy when you only need the medication piece — not when you need everything at once.

CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Refill vs the competitive set

Refill Type Sized for Price Amazon
CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill (this review) Medication only Component top-up $12.95 Check price
SuccorWare 90-Piece Wound Care Refill Wound care 90 pieces $12.99 Check price
First Aid Only 90583 25-Person Refill ANSI fill 25 person $24.99 Check price
General Medi 160-Piece Refill Bag Non-ANSI wound Soft kits $11.93 Check price
UniShield Class B Refill with Medications Class B + meds 50 person $169.95 Check price

Against the field: the SuccorWare refill and First Aid Only 90583 are the wound-care refills this pack is meant to sit alongside, not compete with. The General Medi bag is a similarly priced wound-care top-up rather than a medication pack. The UniShield refill is the only pack here that bundles medication into a full-scale reload — at more than 13× the price for a much bigger cabinet.

CPR Savers vs its two closest medication-refill siblings

Spec CPR Savers Deluxe Refill UniShield Class B w/ Meds FAE-7014 Ibuprofen Refill
Focus General medication packets Full Class B fill + medications Ibuprofen only
Scale Small component pack Large, 50-person cabinet Single-item pack
Price $12.95 $169.95 $8.49
Best for General medication top-up Full cabinet reload Ibuprofen-only restock
  • Buy the CPR Savers pack if you want a general medication-compartment top-up covering more than one type of OTC packet.
  • Buy the UniShield refill if you're doing a full Class B wound-care-plus-medication reload for a larger cabinet.
  • Buy the FAE-7014 refill if ibuprofen specifically is the only packet you've run out of.

Shop medication refills on Amazon → CPR Savers Deluxe Refill UniShield Class B w/ Meds FAE-7014 Ibuprofen Refill

Which kits this refill restocks

Because this is a component top-up, it pairs alongside a full wound-care refill rather than replacing one. The most natural pairings on our shelves: the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill, 25 Person and the First Aid Only 90583 for a 25-person kit whose wound-care side is already handled, the SuccorWare wound care refill for a similarly priced complementary order, and the medication shelf of a wall cabinet like the Medique 712MTM 3-Shelf First Aid Cabinet. Full kits that tend to run their medication compartment dry first — like the First Aid Only 9302-25M Contractor Kit — are also good candidates for this refill on its own, without a matching wound-care order, if the rest of the kit is still fully stocked.

Kit / cabinet Pair this refill with
Urgent First Aid Class A Refill, 25 Person Order both — wound care + medication
First Aid Only 90583 Order both — wound care + medication
First Aid Only 9302-25M Contractor Kit This refill alone if wound care is still stocked
Medique 712MTM 3-Shelf Cabinet Medication shelf top-up

Pair this refill with a full wound-care restock, on Amazon → Urgent First Aid Class A 25-Person First Aid Only 90583

Category context: medication packets inside a first aid program

OSHA's 29 CFR 1910.151 requires adequate first aid supplies to be "readily available," and ANSI Z308.1-2021 defines the minimum wound-care fill for Class A and Class B kits — non-prescription OTC medication is a common supplementary item many workplace programs stock alongside that mandated fill, not a required line on the ANSI minimum-contents list itself. That's why a medication refill like this one is best treated as an addition to a compliant fill, not a substitute for one. Our OSHA first aid kit requirements explained reference covers exactly what the ANSI minimum list requires. The upstream container decision — which kit, which class, how many stations — is covered in our complete first aid kit buyer's guide.

Total cost of ownership

A first aid kit's medication packets run on the same clock as any other dated item — usage and expiration both draw the compartment down over time, often faster than the wound-care side since a single incident can use several packets at once. At $12.95, this refill is a small, predictable line item: figure one pack per year for a light-use kit, or two for a busier site, run alongside your regular wound-care reorder from the Bandages and Wound Care collection. That's a fraction of the $169.95 it costs to do a full medication-inclusive Class B reload with the UniShield refill — worth it only if the whole cabinet, not just the medication shelf, needs restocking.

Final verdict: 4.1/5

The CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit does one narrow job well: restocking single-dose OTC medication packets in a first aid kit's medication compartment, cheaply and without fuss. Buy this as a companion order to a wound-care refill like the SuccorWare refill or the First Aid Only 90583. Buy the UniShield Class B Refill with Medications instead if you need a full cabinet reload including medication in one order, or the First Aid Only FAE-7014 if ibuprofen alone is what's missing.

VIEW ON WC SAFETY → CHECK PRICE ON AMAZON →

CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit — FAQ

Does the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit include bandages or wound care items?

No. This pack is medication packets only — single-dose OTC packets like pain relievers and antihistamines. For bandages, gauze, and wound dressings, pair it with a wound-care refill such as the SuccorWare wound care refill or the First Aid Only 90583.

What kind of medications come in this refill?

It's built around single-dose OTC medication packets — the type commonly found in a first aid kit's medication compartment, such as pain relievers and antihistamines. Check the current product listing for the exact packet mix before ordering, since we do not make dosing recommendations here.

Is this refill ANSI Z308.1 compliant?

No ANSI class is stated for this pack. OTC medication is a common supplementary item in workplace kits but isn't part of the ANSI Z308.1 minimum wound-care fill itself, so this refill doesn't map to a Class A or Class B checklist line the way our Class A and Class B refills do.

Who makes the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit?

It's sold under the CPR Savers & First Aid Supply brand, a name more commonly associated with CPR and rescue equipment — see the CPR and Rescue Supplies collection for the rest of their catalog on our shelves.

How does this compare to the UniShield Class B Refill with Medications?

The UniShield refill is a full 50-person Class B reload that includes medication as part of a much larger fill, priced at $169.95. This CPR Savers pack is a small, medication-only top-up at $12.95 — buy UniShield for a full cabinet reload, this pack for just the medication compartment.

How does this compare to the First Aid Only FAE-7014 Ibuprofen Packets refill?

The FAE-7014 restocks ibuprofen packets only, at $8.49. The CPR Savers pack covers a broader medication-packet assortment for a few dollars more — pick FAE-7014 if ibuprofen alone is what ran out.

Should I buy this instead of a full first aid kit refill?

No — buy it alongside one. A full wound-care refill like the First Aid Only 90583 handles bandages and dressings; this pack handles medication. Most kits need both restocked periodically, just not necessarily on the same schedule.

Which first aid kits does this medication refill pair with?

Any kit whose medication compartment has run low, including 25-person kits like the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill-restocked kits and the First Aid Only 9302-25M Contractor Kit, as well as wall cabinets like the Medique 712MTM 3-Shelf Cabinet.

Is this refill required by OSHA?

No. OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 requires adequate, readily available first aid supplies and points to ANSI Z308.1 as the reference fill, but medication packets are a supplementary item, not part of the ANSI minimum-contents checklist. Details are in our requirements reference.

How often should I restock the medication compartment of a first aid kit?

Check it on the same inspection cycle as the rest of the kit — monthly or quarterly — and reorder whenever packets run low or approach their printed expiration. Busier sites may need this refill more than once a year.

Do the medication packets in this refill expire?

OTC medications carry expiration dates like any dated first aid item, and expired packets should be pulled and replaced. Check the printed date on the packaging when it arrives and again at each inspection.

Can I use this refill in a first aid cabinet instead of a portable kit?

Yes. The packets drop into the medication shelf or pocket of any cabinet from the First Aid Cabinets and Stations collection the same way they'd go into a soft-case kit.

Is this refill a good value at $12.95?

For what it does — a focused medication-packet top-up — yes. It's priced in line with similarly scoped refills like the SuccorWare wound care refill at $12.99, and far cheaper than buying a new kit outright.

What's the difference between a wound-care refill and a medication refill?

A wound-care refill like the General Medi refill bag restocks bandages, gauze, and antiseptic. A medication refill like this one restocks single-dose OTC medication packets. Most kits eventually need both, on separate reorder cycles.

Does WC Safety sell a full wound-care refill to pair with this?

Yes — the SuccorWare 90-Piece Wound Care Refill, the First Aid Only 90583, and the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill are all in the First Aid Kit Refills collection alongside this pack.

Where can I read more about building a complete first aid program?

Start with our which first aid kit do you need guide for the container decision, then browse the best workplace first aid kits guide and best first aid cabinets guide for ranked picks before putting refills like this one on a reorder schedule.

Why trust this CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill review? WC Safety operates as an independent industrial PPE and safety-supply retailer — we stock this refill alongside the wound-care refills and kits it pairs with, and we sell to safety managers, facilities teams, and procurement desks. This review is authored by our editorial desk, not by CPR Savers or any paid third party. Category framing is cross-referenced against ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 and OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 (OSHA medical services and first aid standard). Disclosed: WC Safety stocks this product and earns Amazon affiliate commissions on outbound clicks; neither factor influences the rating.
By Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial — Workplace first aid and emergency-preparedness desk · specialization: ANSI Z308.1 kit classes, OSHA first aid compliance, and facility restocking programs.
Last reviewed: · Sources reviewed: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021, CPR Savers & First Aid Supply product listing and labeling.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Specifications are taken from the manufacturer's published listing; nothing beyond the label is claimed.
How this refill review was researched. We evaluated the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit as a curation and comparison exercise: mapping its stated medication-packet contents against ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021's minimum-fill scope, OSHA's 29 CFR 1910.151 supply expectations, and the competing refill packs stocked in our own catalog. No medication types, dosing, or first-person testing claims are made beyond what the manufacturer's listing states. Reviewed periodically and on any revision to ANSI Z308.1 or OSHA first aid guidance.
Disclosure. WC Safety participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program; outbound Amazon links on this page use our affiliate tag and may earn us a commission at no cost to you. We also stock this product in our own store. The 4.1/5 rating reflects fit-for-purpose, price against the competitive set, and clarity of scope — not sponsorship, which we do not accept. This article is not medical, legal, or regulatory advice; consult your safety officer or a qualified professional for site-specific first aid program requirements, and consult a pharmacist or physician for any medication questions.
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