I know it's too late, but: burns count as an ambulance call. Especially if the skin is blistering and raw, and doubly especially if you can see underlayers of skin (or worse).
And yes, running cold water, not ice, on a burn. Unless the burn is so severe that running cold water peels off skin, in which case you definitely call an ambulance and you tell emergency that information!
The reason for the running cold water is to draw the heat out of the area before it cooks any more of the injured body part. You don't use ice because that's too much of a temperature extreme. Keep the body part under the cold water until you are absolutely certain there is no more excessive heat - my rule of thumb is 'twice as long as you expect'. It does no harm to keep it there longer, after all. (But see above: if running cold water is doing harm, it's an ambulance-and-hospital burn.)
If the skin seems to be still 'cooking' after you take it out of the water, put it back!
To modify my first sentence: not all burns are ambulance worthy. But a burn which is blistering, red and raw - or worse - is ambulance worthy. And if in doubt, call emergency and ask their opinion. Admittedly they're not triage nurses, but they're trying to use ambulances wisely.
Also, a burn which covers a sizeable area, or which is dangerously close to something important (any facial burn, for example), can be ambulance worthy.
And yes, running cold water, not ice, on a burn. Unless the burn is so severe that running cold water peels off skin, in which case you definitely call an ambulance and you tell emergency that information!
The reason for the running cold water is to draw the heat out of the area before it cooks any more of the injured body part. You don't use ice because that's too much of a temperature extreme. Keep the body part under the cold water until you are absolutely certain there is no more excessive heat - my rule of thumb is 'twice as long as you expect'. It does no harm to keep it there longer, after all. (But see above: if running cold water is doing harm, it's an ambulance-and-hospital burn.)
If the skin seems to be still 'cooking' after you take it out of the water, put it back!
To modify my first sentence: not all burns are ambulance worthy. But a burn which is blistering, red and raw - or worse - is ambulance worthy. And if in doubt, call emergency and ask their opinion. Admittedly they're not triage nurses, but they're trying to use ambulances wisely.
Also, a burn which covers a sizeable area, or which is dangerously close to something important (any facial burn, for example), can be ambulance worthy.



Comment