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BURNS, YOUNG WOMEN AND FIRE
by Buck Tilton
On the Fourth of July, 1987, Holly was
co-leading a group of ten 14- and 15-year-old females who had set up camp
in a woods near the shore of a large lake that had recently felt the pull
of their canoe paddles. Although the morning had been bright and beautiful,
storm clouds shadowed the site as dinner water neared boiling on the Peak
One stove. Holly was wearing cotton shorts and a T-shirt.
When the water in the pot bubbled furiously, Holly's co-instructor moved
it to a rock and turned hurriedly away, knocking the pot to the ground.
Most of the scalding water landed in Holly's lap. Some of it splashed
onto the lower legs of her co-leader, who immediately began to scream
in pain and fright. As panic swept the group, Holly's attention was diverted
to settling the young women down and managing her co-leader's burns. "It
was three minutes, tops," says Holly, "until I noticed I was
soaked in steaming water from my waist to my knees." Those three
minutes proved critical.
She rapidly stripped off all her clothes made of cotton "death
cloth," as she now calls it. Intense heat had been trapped against
her skin, allowing the burning process to penetrate deeper and deeper.
The only cold water in camp was inside their water bottles, water which she first
began to pour onto her abdomen and thighs, then used to wet bandannas that
were placed over her burns. Holding the bandannas as best she could, Holly hiked to the lake where she immersed herself
in the cold water, and stood for nearly an hour. When she checked herself,
great boggy blisters had filled on her lower body around pale areas that
continually wept clear fluid.
Deciding on a plan of action, Holly and the group broke camp and paddled
down the shore to a private camp accessible by road. Someone dialed 911
from the camp office, but the storm had broken in summer fury, flooding
the roads and blowing trees to the ground. The ambulance arrived in the
gushing rain two-and-a-half hours after the initial call. During that
time, Holly felt "more pain than I can remember." By the time
the ambulance pulled away with Holly and her co-leader, the private camp's
director had assumed management of Holly's group.
Scalding hot liquids and erupting flammable fuels produce the majority
of serious paddling burns. Burns from campfires, hot cooking gear, and
stoves typically cause minor injuries requiring little care other than
cooling. The Wilderness Medical Society Practice Guidelines for Wilderness
Emergency Care (Globe Pequot Press, Old Saybrook, CT, $12.95) says
initial burn care, despite the seriousness, should be directed toward
stopping the burning process, "within 30 seconds, if possible."
One should cool burns with water or with a dressing designed especially
to cool burns, such as Burnfree, a gel solution of water and plant
extracts created for rapid cooling. Remove clothing and jewelry from the
burn area. Do not try to remove anything stuck to the burn such as melted
synthetic clothing. Check the patient for injuries that might have occurred
in addition to the burn.
How long does the cooling process take? No definitive answer exists. As
long as cooling makes the patient feel better, and hypothermia is not
a threat, you can keep the process going for up to two hours. "Trust
me," says Holly, "every little bit helps."
After cooling, burns should be assessed in three ways:
1.) Depth. First-degree burns are superficial damage to the epidermis
that look red and feel painful. The most common paddling first-degree
burn is sunburn. Second-degree burns are partial-thickness burns of the
dermis (the true skin), forming blisters in addition to redness and pain.
Third-degree injuries penetrate the full thickness of the dermis, produce
no blisters, and look pale (scald burns) or charred (burns from other
high-heat sources such as open flames). Third-degree burns may not cause
pain themselves, but they will be surrounded by areas of intense pain.
Burns are often a combination of one or more depths, and it may take time,
an hour or more in some instances, before you can judge the depth of the
burn. The greater the degree of damage, naturally, the greater the need
for professional medical attention. "All burn wounds are sterile
for the first 24-48 hours," says the Practice Guidelines. But infection
almost invariably results eventually without professional care to deep
burns.
2.) Extent. To determine the amount of the patient's body surface area
burned, use the Rule of Nines. Each arm represents nine percent of the
total body surface area (TBSA). Each leg represents 18 percent (nine for
the front of the leg, nine for the back), the front of the torso represents
18 percent, the back of the torso 18 percent, the head nine percent; and
the groin one percent. First-degree burns are easily managed no matter
their extent. Second- and third-degree burns covering more than 15 percent
TBSA are often life-threatening and require immediate evacuation. Serious
burns to the face may cause airway damage, and should be considered for
immediate evacuation. Third-degree burns to the hands, feet, or genitals
require professional attention as soon as possible to prevent loss of
function.
3.) Pain. The patient's level of pain will help you evaluate the seriousness
of the burn. Pain should resolve within 24 hours for first-degree burns.
Deeper burns will cause increasingly severe pain. If the pain can be controlled
on a river bank or lake shore, the burn can often be managed in the wilderness.
After cooling and assessment, your outdoor care should be directed toward
keeping the wound clean and reducing the pain. Dirty burn wounds should
be washed with great gentleness, using tepid water and mild soap. After
washing, pat the wound dry. To protect burns and ease the pain, leave
the blisters of second-degree burns intact. If the blisters pop while
a physician is still far away, or if you're dealing with third-degree
burns, you can do one or more of several things: 1.) Cover the burn with
a thin layer of antibiotic ointment. 2.) Cover the burn with dressings
such as 2nd Skin® or Burnfree. 3.) Cover the burn with dry gauze
or clean dry clothing. Covering burns reduces pain and evaporative fluid
losses. Do not use an occlusive dressing, one that prevents all air or
water from passing through. Do not place ice on large burns. When the
trip to the doctor will not be a long one, do not re-dress or re-examine
the burn. If evacuation will take more than a day, change the dressings
at least once a day: remove old dressings, remove old ointment (you may
have to gently wash off old ointment with tepid water), and re-apply fresh
ointment and dressings.
Serious burns will swell. In case of burns
to the arms and legs, the extremities should be elevated to minimize swelling.
Burn patients should gently and regularly exercise burned body areas as
much as they can tolerate.
"Ibuprofen," says the Practice Guidelines, "is probably the best over-the-counter
analgesic for burn pain (including sunburn)."
Burn patients should be encouraged to drink as much water as they can
during the entire evacuation process.
Approximately seven hours after the incident, Holly arrived at the nearest
hospital. The hospital staff gave their immediate attention to the second
instructor, the one "obviously" in pain and distress. Holly's
quiet lack of complaint relegated her to a room for observation and later
treatment. She should have complained. After three days, she says, "the
lower front of my body looked like leather and steady doses of morphine
failed to keep the pain away." She had burns to the second- and third-degree
over approximately 15 percent of her body. It was almost three weeks before
Holly left the hospital. It was months before her treatment ended.
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