As Summer
starts, one key element of health care during these months is poison control.
In 2013, America’s 55 poison centers received over 3.1 million calls, and about
2.2 million of those were for poison exposures including carbon monoxide, food
poisoning, snake bites, and many more. The remainder of those calls consisted
of people asking general information about poison, according to the AAPCC.
The
American Association of Poison Control Centers supports the nation’s 55 poison
centers in their efforts to prevent and
treat poison exposures. These locations offer free and confidential medical
advice 24/7 through the toll free poison help line at 800-222-1222. This
service provides a primary source for information about poisoning and helps
reduce costly emergency room visits through in-home treatment in non-emergency
situations.
According
to the Texas Poison Center Network, in years past, if your child swallowed some
type of poison, you wouldn't think twice about using Ipecac to induce vomiting.
Today, Poison Centers would never recommend Ipecac. However, many online
sources still vouch for its effectiveness. In a panic, people often click on
the first seemingly reputable option online.
Every
second counts when it comes to poisoning. The longer it takes to look through
pages of search results online, the greater the danger of negative health
effects. A mistreated poison exposure can escalate an easy in-home treatment
into a trip to the hospital.
Because
factors like weight, height, medical history, and in some cases even geography
can drastically change the outcome of a poison exposure, it's vital that
poisonings are handled on a case-by- case basis. Poison Center experts are the
only reliable source for accurate medical recommendations regarding
poisons.
Calling a
Poison Center is like calling a really smart, caring family member, minus the
judgment and gossip-spreading. The voice on the other end of the line is a
medical professional who has undergone years of training and rigorous testing
just to qualify to answer your questions. In fact, 20 percent of calls are from
doctors, nurses and other health care professionals who are seeking specialized
treatment advice. More info can be found at this site: http://www.poisoncontrol.org/ .
However,
there are a great number of poisonings that happen that never result in an
initial call to a poison control center. In 2010
there were 42,917 deaths attributed to poison, yet poison centers were consulted in
1,730 poisoning fatalities (only
4%). The CDC estimated that there were 1,098,880 poisoning injuries in
2010 that resulted in a visit to an emergency department.
Yet,
poison centers were involved in only 601,197 cases that involved treatment at a
health care facility, indicating that poison centers are not consulted for many
poisoning-related ED visits. Poisonings also go unreported when people do
not realize they have been exposed, choose not to seek medical treatment or advice,
do not have access to medical care, or do not know about poison center
services.
In 2013,
the National Capital Poison Center provided consultations for 54,534 callers
from the DC metro area. Sixty-nine percent (38,197) were about people
exposed to a poison. Other consultations involved pet poisonings (1,566) and
information requests (14,771). Some interesting facts include:
·
Most
poison exposures (77%) were
unintentional. The Center also received calls about other types of
poisonings: medication side effects, substance abuse, malicious poisonings, and
suicide attempts.
·
14,771
people (27%) called for poison-related information. Their questions were about
possible problems with medication interactions, pesticide use, workplace
chemicals, the safety of specific medications while breast-feeding, and many
more topics.
·
44%
of poison exposures involved children younger than six, but the most serious
cases occurred in adolescents and adults.
·
55%
of poison exposures involved medications; other exposures were to household or
automotive products, plants, mushrooms, pesticides, animal bites and stings.
·
75% of
poison exposures involved people who swallowed a drug or poison. People were
also poisoned by inhalation and through exposures to the skin or eyes.
·
65%
of poison exposures were safely managed over the phone and did not need medical
treatment in a health care facility. However, 82% of those who called a
poison center first, before going to a health care facility were safety treated
at home. This number increases to 90% for pediatric poisonings when the Poison
Center is consulted first, before other medical intervention is sought.
Although
these specific stats are for the Metro DC area, they are indicative of the
general types of poisonings that happen nationwide. More info about this topic
and other associated details can be found at this site: http://www.poison.org/ .
What
should you do in an event regarding a poisoning? REMAIN CALM. For
UNCONSCIOUS patients, CONVULSIONS, or any DIFFICULTY BREATHING, call 9-1-1. Otherwise
call the Poison Control Center TOLL FREE NUMBER.
Information the
Poison Center Specialist Will Need:
·
AGE and WEIGHT of
the person.
·
WHAT was ingested.
Have the bottle or container with you.
·
HOW MUCH was taken.
This will help the Poison Center Specialist determine the severity of the
incident.
·
HOW the victim is
feeling or acting right now.
·
Your NAME and PHONE
number.
Here are some safety tips:
·
EYE - Flood the eye with lukewarm water Repeat for 15
minutes. Encourage patient to blink while flushing the eye. Do not force the
eyelid open.
·
SWALLOWED MEDICINE - Do not give anything by mouth until calling for
advice
·
CHEMICAL OR
HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS -
Unless patient is unconscious, having convulsions, or cannot swallow - give a
small amount of water. Then call for professional advice to find out if patient
should be made to vomit. Do NOT induce vomiting unless recommended by your
physician or the Poison Center.
·
INHALED - Immediately get patient to fresh air. Avoid
breathing fumes. Open doors and windows. If victim is not breathing, call for
help and start assisted (mouth-to-mouth) breathing.
·
SKIN -
Remove contaminated clothing and flood skin with water for 15 minutes. Then
wash gently with soap and water and rinse.
Here are
some preventive safety tips, according to www.calpoison.org
:
How Can You Prevent
Poisonings?
Medicines
·
Use
only child resistant covers.
·
Keep
in locked cabinets.
·
Return
to safe storage immediately after use.
·
Always
measure dose - don't guess.
·
Never
tell children that medicine is candy.
·
Never
take medicine in front of children. They often imitate adults.
·
Keep
all purses out of your child's reach. They may contain medicines or other items
that could harm a child.
Disposal of Medicines
·
Old,
unused and expired prescription and over the counter medication should not
be kept
·
Always
be careful to remove and/or destroy all personal information on the medication
container
·
Wrap
medication containers in a thick paper bag or plastic bag that can be closed
and place in the trash
·
Place
medicines in the trash just before pick-up so that children and animals don’t
get to it
·
Tablets
and capsules can be crushed or melted in water and mixed with kitty litter,
coffee grounds, sand or other kitchen garbage, put in a plastic bag and thrown
away
·
Some
cities and counties in California have drop-off sites that you can take
your medication to, call your county's hazardous waste collection center
to find out
·
Flushing
medication down the toilet is discouraged and it is better to try one of the
other ways listed above, but keeping the home safe by removing old and unused
medication is most important
Household Products:
·
Select
products with child resistant covers.
·
Keep
in locked cabinets.
·
Return
to safe storage immediately after use.
·
Store
products and food in separate areas.
·
Keep
products in original containers. Never put them into food or beverage
containers.
·
Don't
turn your back on a child when a product is within reach. If the phone or
doorbell rings, take the child with you.
Plants:
·
Know
the names of all your plants and which ones are poisonous.
·
Keep
all plants out of the reach of small children.
·
Teach
children not to put any part of plants in their mouths.
Poisonings
are going to happen. Some are life threatening, but all of them are dangerous.
Take time to review your house and other areas you frequent. Practice safety
wherever you are regarding poison control. Remember to teach everyone in your
household and office good prevention for poison control. Keep your doctor’s
phone number handy, and always call 911 if you have an emergency.
Until next
time.
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