Poisons Overview
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First Aid

Poisons Overview

The danger of poisons:

Persons of any age can become ill if they come into contact with certain medications, household pesticides, chemicals, cosmetics, or plants. However, children, in particular, continue to face a greater risk of unintentional poisoning death and exposure than adults - not only because they are smaller, but, also because they have faster metabolic rates and are less able physically to handle toxic chemicals.

What causes poisonings?

Young children are poisoned most often by things in the home, such as, but not limited to, the following:

Increasingly, carbon monoxide poisoning and lead poisoning are posing a threat to both children and adults. While serious reactions can occur in all cases of poisoning, most persons are not permanently harmed if they are treated immediately.

How do most poisonings occur?

More than 90 percent of all poison exposures occur in the home. Among children ages 5 and under, 57 percent of poison exposures are by non-pharmaceutical products such as cosmetics, cleaning substances, plants, pesticides, and art supplies, and 43 percent are by drugs and medications.

Most poisonings occur when parents are not paying close attention or watching children as closely as usual. Calls to poison control centers peak between 4 p.m. and 10 p.m. In fact, because the hectic routine of getting dinner on the table causes so many lapses in parental attention, late afternoon has come to be known as "the arsenic hour" by poison center personnel.

What to do if a poisoning occurs:

swallowed poisons
If you find your child with an open or empty container of a toxic substance, your child may have been poisoned. Stay calm and act quickly:

Take or send the poison container with your child to help the physician determine what was swallowed.

If your child does not have these symptoms, call your local poison control center or your child's physician. They will need the following information in order to help you:

poisons on the skin
If your child spills a chemical on her body, remove his/her clothes and rinse the skin with lukewarm - not hot - water. If the area shows signs of being burned, continue rinsing for at least 15 minutes, no matter how much your child may protest. Then call the poison control center for further advice. Do not use ointments or grease.

poison in the eye
Flush the eye by holding the eyelid open and pouring a steady stream of lukewarm water (not hot) into the inner corner of the eye. If this is a child, you may need help from another adult to hold the child while you rinse the eye. Continue flushing the eye for 15 minutes, and call the poison control center for further instructions. Do not use an eyecup, eyedrops or ointment unless the poison center instructs you to do so.

poisonous fumes or gases
In the home, poisonous fumes can be emitted from the following sources:

If your child breathes in fumes or gases, get him/her into fresh air right away.

Be prepared for a poisoning emergency by posting the poison center telephone number by every telephone in your home.


This page was last updated on: January 25, 2008.

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