Electric Shock
What is an electric shock?
An electric shock happens when you have contact with an electric
current and the current passes through your body. It can cause
serious injury or death.
What are the symptoms?
A mild electrical shock can cause a mild tingling. A severe
electric shock may knock you unconscious, burn you, and cause
internal damage. The outside wound may look minor, but the injury
can actually be quite severe.
What is the first aid for electric shock?
You can save a person's life and prevent injury to yourself if you
take proper emergency action when someone gets an electric shock:
- The first step is to make sure that the electrical contact has
been broken. Use something that does not conduct electricity,
such as a piece of wood, cardboard, or rubber, to try to move
the person away from the source of electricity. Be careful or
you could also get an electric shock. Turn off the electric
power by unplugging the appliance or flipping the circuit
breaker. Do not try to move someone who is touching a high
voltage wire.
- Call for help by dialing 911 or another local emergency
number. Have someone else do this if you are giving CPR.
- Keep the injured person lying down. Do not move someone who
may have a neck or spine injury unless absolutely necessary.
- See if the person can respond to you. For example, speak to or
tap the person. If there is no response, start CPR.
- If the person is pale or feeling faint, have them lie down
with their legs slightly raised. Keep them covered with a
light blanket or coat until help arrives.
If the person is burned:
- Take off burned clothing that is not stuck to the skin.
- Remove any jewelry and tight-fitting clothing from around the
burned area right away. It might be hard to remove later
because the burned area may swell. DO NOT remove clothing that
is stuck to the burn.
- Do NOT put ice water, butter, ointment, medicine, or spray on
the burn. DO immerse the burned area in cold water or apply
cold moist cloths briefly to bring the body temperature back
to normal. Leaving the burned area in cold water too long can
cool the body too much, especially if the immersed area is
large.
- Avoid touching the burn. Cover the burned area with a sterile
dressing or a clean cloth. Do not use anything that is heavy
or has loose fibers, such as a towel or blanket.
How can I help prevent electric shock?
You can help prevent electric shock around the home by doing the
following:
- Childproof all electrical outlets with plastic plugs.
- Install ground fault circuit interrupters (GFCI) on electrical
outlets.
- Teach children about electrical safety.
- Stay clear of electrical power lines when you are trimming
trees or using gardening tools.
- Do not touch fallen wires. Report fallen wires to the police
or local utility right away. If you are in a car and a wire
has fallen on it, stay in the car and drive away if you can.
Do not touch anything metal in the car until the source of
electricity is removed. If you cannot drive away, do not get
out of the car. Wait for help.
To protect yourself from lightening strikes:
- Watch for developing thunderstorms. If you can hear thunder,
seek shelter right away in a safe building or vehicle. Picnic
shelters, dugouts, sheds, and other partially open or small
structures are NOT safe. A safe vehicle is a car, SUV,
minivan, bus, or tractor with a hard top.
- When you are indoors during a storm, stay away from showers,
sinks, bathtubs, hot tubs, and electronic equipment such as
TVs, radios, computers, and corded phones.
- Stay inside until 30 minutes have passed since you last heard
thunder.
- If you are caught outdoors during a thunderstorm and cannot
run to safe shelter, there are things you can do that might
lessen the chance of being struck by lightning: Stay away from
tall, isolated trees or other tall and isolated objects.
Lightning typically strikes the tallest object. That may be
you in an open field or clearing. Get to a low spot and stay
at least 15 feet apart from other members of your group so the
lightning won't travel from one person to another if one of
you is struck. Keep your feet together and sit on the ground.
Do not lie flat on the ground.
- If you are swimming or boating when a storm is approaching,
get out of the water. If there is no time to get out of your
boat and onto land, stay low and avoid contact with the water.
If the boat has a cabin, go into the cabin.
Developed by RelayHealth.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2007-05-22
Last reviewed: 2007-04-25
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2009 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.