1oldcoyote
Active member
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2022
- Messages
- 139
Open chest wound; How I would treat myself.
In Emergency Services, the phrase "Golden Hour". Refers to the likely hood of survival in a serious trauma incident. Getting that victim to advanced emergency care/treatment within that 1st hour. There are many factors that play into that 1st hour as for survival of that trauma victim.
To treat an open chest wound. 1st thing I would do immediately is. Place my bare hand(meaty area at the base of my thumb on my palm). Over that exposed skin wound to plug it up. Sealing that wound with my hand. In order to stop air rushing into my chest cavity, when I inhale. Otherwise, air will rush into that hole & into my chest upon inhalation. Eventually collapsing my lung if not stopped.
Other than using my bare hand. IF...I had a few medical supplies at hand. Such as an "occlusive dressing" & some medical tape. To apply that occlusive dressing over my wound. Then use the tape to seal up 3 sides of that dressing. Leaving the fourth side un-taped. So any trapped air in my chest could escape upon exhalation. The taped dressing acts like a "clapper valve" or a "1-way valve". Letting trapped air escape & not letting outside air in when I inhale.
An occlusive dressing is non-permeable. It does NOT let air pass through it.
In Emergency Services, the phrase "Golden Hour". Refers to the likely hood of survival in a serious trauma incident. Getting that victim to advanced emergency care/treatment within that 1st hour. There are many factors that play into that 1st hour as for survival of that trauma victim.
To treat an open chest wound. 1st thing I would do immediately is. Place my bare hand(meaty area at the base of my thumb on my palm). Over that exposed skin wound to plug it up. Sealing that wound with my hand. In order to stop air rushing into my chest cavity, when I inhale. Otherwise, air will rush into that hole & into my chest upon inhalation. Eventually collapsing my lung if not stopped.
Other than using my bare hand. IF...I had a few medical supplies at hand. Such as an "occlusive dressing" & some medical tape. To apply that occlusive dressing over my wound. Then use the tape to seal up 3 sides of that dressing. Leaving the fourth side un-taped. So any trapped air in my chest could escape upon exhalation. The taped dressing acts like a "clapper valve" or a "1-way valve". Letting trapped air escape & not letting outside air in when I inhale.
An occlusive dressing is non-permeable. It does NOT let air pass through it.
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