HOWE HEALTH GUIDE
NAIL PUNCTURES (By the Department of Health) For a ehilil to run a nail into his foot is cot at all uncommon wherever boxes or wood with nails therein arc left lying about. In construction works nail puncture wounds of feet or hands are happening all the time. Whether it's a child playing, or a worker working, nail puncture injuries want prompt treatment. There's always the danger of infection —and in a loot or hand this can be so serious as to lead to crippling. Should horses or cattle be there's the more remote danger ol tetanus. Now a nail that pierces the foot is. wiped clean in the first quar.er inch of the puncture tract. In some factories and construction units employing doctors it's, customary to cleanse the. area and with pointed scissors to trim away the edges oi: the wound through the full thickness of the skin so that a round hole is left that will give good drainage. The wound if very dirty, is probed for a quarter of an inch, to cleanse it and then dressed. By such prompt attention infection * and sick leave are reduced to negligible proportions. When your child runs a nail into the foot, you should give up time at once to dressing the injury. Wash the wound well with soap and water, paint it with antiseptic, such as iodine of metaphen and put on a sterile dressing. That night or the. next dny should there be throbbing tenderness, swelling—signs of infection—soak the. foot in hot epsom salt water, jor put on glycerine or epsom salt poultice. I If this doesn"t stop the trouble, call your doctor. He will decide whether more drainage is needed and possibly whether tetanus antitoxin should be used. The chances are you'll have no bother if you always wash and dress a nail puncture wound as it occurs.
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 8, Issue 85, 29 June 1945, Page 7
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314HOWE HEALTH GUIDE Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 8, Issue 85, 29 June 1945, Page 7
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