Washington: A new research has revealed that the best first aid approach to address burn injuries in children is by using cold running water for at least 20 minutes.
The study published in the January edition of Annals of Emergency Medicine found that cool running water can reduce the odds of needing a skin graft, expedite healing and lessen the chance that a young burn victim would require admission to the hospital or an operating procedure.
“If a child is burned, the first course of treatment should be 20 minutes of cool running water,” said Bronwyn R. Griffin, Ph.D., an honorary senior fellow at the University of Queensland Child Health Research Centre (Australia) and study co-author.
“Cool running water is most effective immediately after a burn occurs, but evidence suggests it remains beneficial for up to three hours following an injury.”
The study shows children who received adequate first aid involving 20 minutes or more of cooling with running water had the odds of skin grafting reduced by more than 40 percent.
Providing any amount of cool running water was associated with reduced odds of hospital admission by 35.8 percent and reduced the odds of requiring treatment in an operating room by 42.4 percent.
Among patients who did not require grafting, the speed of healing was faster with the administration of any cool running water. This is important because faster healing reduces the risk of scarring, the authors note.
Study results confirm that burns cooled with running water fared better than those that received no first aid or an alternative to cool running water, such as aloe, gels, compresses, toothpaste, butter or egg whites, for example.
The study, “Cool Running Water First Aid Decreases Skin Grafting Requirements in Pediatric Burns,” analyzed the treatment of 2,495 children at a children’s hospital with the median age of two years old.
Patients in the study cohort were treated most frequently for scalds, liquid or steam burns, on or near their arms or legs. These types of mild to moderate burns commonly occur at home.
The optimal duration of cool running water therapy remains under discussion. The Australian Burn Association, British Burn Association, and European Burns Association all recommend 20 minutes of cool running water.
The American Burn Association calls for five or more minutes and the British Red Cross and St. John Ambulance (UK) both prescribe 10 minutes or more. This study lends further support to the recommendation of a full 20 minutes, the authors note.
“Whether you are a parent or paramedic, administering 20 minutes of cool running water to a child’s burn is highly recommended. This is the most effective way to lessen the severity of tissue damage from all thermal burns,” said Dr. Griffin.