A burn keeps damaging tissue after the heat source is gone. The goal is to cool the skin safely, avoid folk remedies that trap heat, and know when a burn needs urgent medical care.
Cool running water is the first move for many minor burns. Keep it gentle and cool, not icy.
Skip butter, oil, toothpaste, flour, or egg. They can trap heat, hide the injury, and raise infection risk.
Remove tight rings, bracelets, or clothing near the burn if they are not stuck, because swelling can happen quickly.
Get urgent care for burns on the face, hands, genitals, large areas, deep burns, chemical burns, electrical burns, or trouble breathing.
Early cooling can reduce pain and depth of injury. The best burn care often begins before anyone reaches a clinic.
A younger sibling touches a hot pan. An older relative reaches for toothpaste because “that always helped before.”
Teach one person the burn rule: cool water first, cover loosely, no kitchen remedies.
Make a two-line poster: “Cool the burn. Do not cover it with food or paste.”
Turn the lesson into a one-minute plan. Your note stays only on this device.
What do you actually see, hear, or know in this scenario? Stick to the facts.
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