Immobilisation for a snake bite
Use for sea and land snake bites, funnel web spider bites, blue ringed octopus and cone shell stings
Attention
- Do not wash, cut or drain wound or apply suction
- Use this procedure for bite on limb
- If bitten on head or torso — just bandage bite site
- Keep person calm, reassured and lying or sitting still
- Work quickly, don't bother to remove clothing
What you need
- 3 or more 10–15cm tension/elastic compression bandages if not available — use crepe bandages
- Splint
- Tape
- Marker/pen for marking bite site
- Stretcher
What you do
- Wrap first bandage over bite site — Figure 3.79
- Start second bandage at fingers or toes and wrap bandage/s firmly up limb as far as
possible — Figure 3.80
- Include fingers/toes in bandaging to stop them moving and moving muscles
- Leave tips of fingers/toes visible to check circulation
- Mark bite or sting site on bandage — Figure 3.80
Figure 3.79
Figure 3.80
- Bandage firmly as for sprain — hard to put in fingers under bandage but not tight enough to cut circulation
- Aim is to prevent spread of venom by
- Stopping muscle, limb, joint movement
- Compressing lymphatic vessels
- Use last bandage/s to bind limb to splint — Figure 3.81 and Figure 3.82
- Bites to arm or hand. Put arm in sling to stop movement — Figure 3.82
- Have elbow bent
- Bites to leg or foot. If no splint handy — tie legs together — Figure 3.83
- Now immobilise whole person — use stretcher if available
Figure 3.81
Figure 3.82
Figure 3.83