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The Importance Of Knowing At Least Basic First Aid

Sarah Anderson | 10.02.2010 15:10 | Health | World

OK, so this isn't news, but it's something that I've thought a lot about recently and I think is really important! So please, at least read the title and think about it! I'll try to keep this short...

I was visiting friends in Europe recently when I was bitten by a dog - it wasn't her fault (or mine!) but it was pretty deep and it hurt like hell! Explaining to my friends around me why I was making it bleed more, what to do if someone goes into shock (which I wasn't about to admit was happening to me!) and where my first aid kit was, helped to distract me from the feeling that I was about to pass out.

One of my friends insisted that I go to the hospital - I agreed in the end because I had no steri-strips in my kit. At the hospital, I was told I'd have to pay nearly 100 euros up front and would get my money back in the UK if I had insurance (note - if you go to hospital in an ambulance and you have a health insurance card (E111) you just hand that over and the bill gets sent to you back at home). With pressure from my friends, I reluctantly agreed.

The doctor I saw first shook my hand (not the bitten one, but the one that had been holding the bloody swabs...) then my friends' hands, before going straight on to look at the bite. Now, treating myself, I don't bother wearing gloves, but when treating someone else, you should do, for their safety and for your safety. At least sterilise your hands before and after... or wash them in water... do something to make it look like you're cleaning them! (But really, wear gloves... and I mean proper latex (or latex-free) surgical gloves!)

I asked my friend to remind me that I had iodine in my kit in the car (iodine kills everything: bacteria, etc.); the doctor put steri-strips on my hand, prescribed me anti-biotics and I was free to go. I spent less than 4 minutes in the room and it cost me almost 100 euros!? I sat in the car (cleaning the wounds with iodine) and thought about first aid and how I already knew what to do about dog bites. Considering I never took the anti-biotics, what did I pay for? Less (and worse) treatment than I could have done myself?! A couple of steri-strips and a little chat?!

Especially in the UK, we really rely on having a healthcare system that is affordable/free (usually) and that is relatively good (doctors at least wash their hands). We rely on having a health-care system in general... This doesn't exist everywhere and, when there is healthcare, it's not necassarily good or affordable!

And what if you're in a country illegally, or you know someone who is? What if you (or your friend) are on the run and can't risk going to a hospital? What if you need to pay up front (you'll get it back) and you don't have the money in the first place? What if one day we're told "No, fuck you - you're a policitcal activist, we're not treating you" - seems far-fetched (the last one) but what would you do?

I was talking to a friend of mine a while ago:

Her: "You know, I've been thinking - if we really want to "get out of the system" we might have to learn how to do surgery on eachother, just in case"
Me: "Haha, yeah. I know some people I wouldn't even trust with a bandage!"
Us: Laughing, joking... It sinks in: oh fuck, she has a point.

OK, so maybe thinking about if we'd ever have to do surgery on eachother is taking it a bit far (is it?), at least in this country... but there is a point there. Whether we choose not to rely on the healthcare system because we just don't want to be reliant on it, or whether the system just isn't available to us anymore, knowing at least basic first aid is something we should all think about. Even if it's just because you don't want to spend 4 hours in a hospital waiting room just to be given a plaster and told your injury's not actually as serious as you thought... learn first aid.

We're not taught these things at a young age, we're not taught how to look after ourselves properly, we're not taught about what kinds of plants and herbs have different healing/disinfectant/soothing effects, we're not taught basic first aid... why? Because "they" want us to be reliant on them?

Prevention is better than cure: look after your body, become stonger, strengthen your immune system...

You can't always prevent things (dislocations, cutting yourself, car accidents, etc.): learn basic first aid, how to keep someone alive until the ambulance gets there to take over (if really serious), what to do, what not to do, things to look out for (signs of infection)...

If you get ill: are there any foods that would help? Ginger is good for nausea or warming you up, chamomile relaxes, the list of anti-spasmodics, laxatives, anti-inflammatories... is endless. We all know that we can't trust pharmaceutical companies, so why don't more of us know how to treat ourselves? It might be scary to think you might fuck up a disgnosis of yourself or a friend and you think you're better off going to a "professional", but the knowledge should still be there, in our heads, just in case we need it.

Action Medics:  http://ukmedic.ox4.org/ (a good start)

Sarah Anderson
- e-mail: sarah.anderson1988@yahoo.co.uk

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

We are not taught basic first aid because they want us to be reliant on them

10.02.2010 16:07

Oh please get real, it's not exactly top secret information. There are numerous courses you can attend, but unfortunately the majority of folks can't be bothered to learn any useful skills what so ever, let alone first aid.

As for operating on one another, I suppose you could remove an appendix with a swiss army knife, better get practicing.

Phil the building site trained first aider.


Street medics

11.02.2010 14:31

Activists have done this for years starting with the street medics in the USA and here at the G8, climate camp etc with activist medics. Many activists have medical skills I for instance am a midwife and nurse, there are GPs, paramedics, herbalists, etc etc.
Activists were, so I understand, denied treatment at the G8 demos in Edinburgh in 2005 by NHS paramedics. Activist medics were even chased through the streets by riot cops at the same time.
As for activists being denied treatment some press and some police as well as big pharma have actually already said that all animal rights activists should be denied any medical treatment.
The basic morals of ANY health worker though is to care for whoever needs it without prejudice or favour.

Lynn Sawyer


health and safety

11.02.2010 17:30

As a London-based street medic who has treated people on various demos I agree with most of what you wrote. However, you must never ever assume that basic first aid can entirely replace hospital treatment. Even when treating people bitten by police dogs, we patch them up and strongly advise they visit a hospital- and if they're afraid of arrest, we advise they visit one somewhere else at most a couple days later.

This is because the hospital will access whether their was a risk of rabies, and if they perscribe antibiotics it is VERY advisable you take them, as dog's mouths are full of bacteria and the ragged nature of dog bite wounds makes them heal a little slower. Seriously, it is worth taking them than getting an infection and having go to back to hospital ANYWAY when you're in excruciating pain and at high risk.
Also, most NHS hospital don't hand out antibiotic like candy- if they give them to you, there's a good chance because you should take them.

p.s.
please keep in mind that some protest injuries- such as head wounds and possible spinal injuries- ALWAYS warrant a hospital trip or at least an appointment with a GP

red-and-black-cross


When I said "they want us to be reliant on them?"

12.02.2010 22:01

I was just repeating something someone else said. Of course there are free courses you can take and many people just can't be bothered - that's why I wrote the article; I'm not great with trying to explain things, but I really realised the importance of having some knowledge of how to care for myself. The treatment I got in a West European hospital lately was really shit (I was shocked!) and I was just glad that I had iodine with me and knew to make the bite wound bleed more in the first place (to help flush out bacteria) and what signs of infection to look out for (it's my own choice whether or not to take anti-biotics, I wasn't saying that noone should take them).

Of course, while we have the NHS system in the UK, we can choose to use it (my friend chooses to go to her doctor to find out what's wrong with her, then treats it herself if she can). I was just pointing out that we really take what we have for granted and that everyone should learn at least basic first aid, etc. Because one day you might need to use some of the info you've learned - not because I was saying that we can treat everything ourselves using first aid.....

Medics, keep up the great work! I'm a street medic too now and do advice that people go to hospital, etc. don't worry! Lynn, keep up the great work too! Everyone else - think about learning some extra skills!

Sarah


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