Cool Ways to Treat Them You're having coffee at the kitchen table with your best friend, listening with rapt attention as she describes her triumph over a rival at work, when your toddler suddenly darts up to the table, grabs a corner of your place mat and jerks. The coffee cup tips over and hot coffee cascades down your child's arm. As your daughter's shrieks mount in a rising crescendo, so does your panic. You don't know whether to run for water, ice, butter or the doctor. What in the world should you do? When your child is burned, you'll have to act quickly to control damage and ease the pain. Any serious burn requires immediate emergency care, but if the skin is just a bit red, the burn is usually minor and you can treat it at home. Here's how. Cool it with water. ''If your child has been burned or scalded, apply cool compresses (using wet washcloths or paper towels) for 10 to 15 minutes,'' says Lynn Sugarman, M.D., a pediatrician with Tenafly Pediatrics in Never mind ice. Don't apply ice to the burn, though, Dr. Sugarman warns, and don't add ice cubes to the cool water. Ice or ice water will further damage the skin. You can offer acetaminophen (Children's Tylenol) for the pain. Check the package directions for the correct dosage for your child's age and weight. If your child is under age two, consult a physician. But do not use topical anesthetic sprays, because these can cause an allergic reaction. Use gauze, not creams. ''Never put butter, grease, oil or a cream ointment on a burn. They hold the heat in the burned tissue and make the burn worse,'' says Barbara Lewis, a burn technician and community burn educator at St. Barnabas Burn Foundation in
Leave blisters alone. ''If your child develops a blister at the burn site, leave it alone,'' says Dr. Sugarman. The surface of a blister acts as a protective covering for the healing skin underneath and breaking it may lead to infection, she warns. If the blister should accidentally break, check with your doctor to make sure your child's tetanus immunization is up to date. Watch for infection. ''Keep an eye on your child's burn. If you notice any increase in swelling or redness, or if the area starts to smell or ooze, see your doctor,'' says Dr. Sugarman. ''The burn may have become infected and will need to be treated with antibiotics. '' |
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Home Remedies for BURNS
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