Wound cleaning is one of the extended transport protocols. It can make the difference in a wound that is manageable in the field and one that needs an emergency evacuation.
We do not perform wound cleaning on any wound that we have controlled a massive hemorrhage on (with a tourniquet or wound packing). If you have downgraded a tourniquet to a pressure dressing (you just used the tourniquet to “buy time”), and you are confident that the bleed is controlled and not serious, you can clean the wound. You may need to consider cleaning the wound anyway if you will be stuck with the patient for an extended period of time.
Wound cleaning is pretty simple—you just need a few basic tools and plenty of clean water.
You should also take precautions to protect yourself from the fluids—water and wound stuff will be spraying about if you do this right. You should wear gloves and some kind of eye protection at the very least.
Tools needed:
Steps:
Cleaning the wound will take a lot of water and be somewhat messy. You should plan for this and have a way to catch all of the wastewater that comes from the process. The plan might be to let it soak into the ground. But if you are in a tent or something, you may want to try and catch the fluids and debris in a trash bag or something. This fluid can also be used as the base for a soup; however, it is not vegan friendly.