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First Aid and fireworks

Firework Advice and First Aid tips should something go wrong

Over a four week period around November 5th more than 1,000 people are likely to suffer injuries due to fireworks. Of these accidents, nearly 600 are likely to occur at home or private parties and nearly 400 accidents are likely to  involve children under the age of 13*.

Picture Supplied by Action Images

The safest way to enjoy Fireworks is to go to a properly organised display. However if you’re buying fireworks to use at home, check the fireworks conform to British Standards. Only set fireworks off in your garden if you’ve got enough space.

If you are organising any firework display, you should have an appropriately stocked first aid kit, a bucket of sand and plenty of water, a fire blanket and a bottle of sterile saline to irrigate eyes.

Sparklers

Sparklers are often viewed as a more harmless firework, but they still burn fiercely and are not suitable for children under the age of five years old. They can get six times as hot as a pan of cooking oil or as hot as a welder’s torch.

Light sparklers one at a time and always wear gloves.

Always supervise children with sparklers and ensure that they stand still, away from other people.

However careful you are, injuries can happen and here is how to treat some of the more common ones:

Minor burns

If clothing is on fire

Remember : stop, drop, wrap and roll.

Severe burns

If clothing has caught fire it is more than likely that the burn will be severe. A severe burn is deep and may not hurt as much as a minor one due to damaged nerve endings.

For ALL burns NEVER

Eye injuries

Fireworks and bonfires have sparks, which can land in the eye and be painful. Open the casualty’s eye and carefully look for any embedded object. If there is anything lodged in the eye, cover both eyes and phone for an ambulance. If you can see the object in the eye and it is moving freely, use a sterile eye wash and gently irrigate the eye to remove it. If the casualty is still in pain, or discomfort, seek medical advice.

It is strongly advised that parents attend a practical First Aid course to understand what to do in a medical emergency.

First Aid for life provides this information for guidance and it is not in any way a substitute for medical advice. First Aid for Life is not responsible or liable for any diagnosis made, or actions taken based on this information.
emma@firstaidforlife.org.uk

*based on 1994 statistics

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