How to Know When Kitchen Injuries Need Professional Care
Your child is helping you cook.
The knife slips. Their finger’s bleeding.
You grab paper towels. Apply pressure. The bleeding slows down.
But when you look at it… it’s deep.
Do they need stitches? Or can you just bandage it?
Here’s how to know.
🔪 Cuts: The Stitches Decision Tree
Come to Night Watch if:
1. The Edges Gape Open
After you release pressure, do the edges pull apart? Can you see inside? Needs stitches.
2. It Won’t Stop Bleeding
After 10 minutes of continuous pressure, still bleeding steadily? Needs evaluation.
3. You Can See Fat, Muscle, or Bone
Needs stitches. Immediately.
4. It’s on Your Face or Hand
Facial cuts risk scarring. Hand cuts risk nerve/tendon damage. Both need professional evaluation.
5. It’s Over a Joint
Knuckles, knees, elbows. Movement pulls edges apart. Needs stitches or special closure.
6. Numbness or Weakness
Can’t feel your finger? Can’t move it normally? Possible nerve or tendon damage. Needs immediate care.
7. Caused by Something Dirty
Rusty knife? Dirty knife? Needs thorough cleaning and tetanus check.
8. It’s Been Hours
Cuts heal best when closed within 6-8 hours. After 12 hours, infection risk increases significantly.
🔥 Burns: First, Second, or Third Degree?
First-Degree Burns (Superficial)
What it looks like:
- Red, painful
- No blisters
- Like a bad sunburn
Treatment: Cool water, aloe, OTC pain relief. Usually okay to treat at home.
Second-Degree Burns (Partial Thickness)
What it looks like:
- Red, very painful
- BLISTERS
- May be wet/weeping
Come to Night Watch if:
- Larger than 3 inches
- On face, hands, feet, joints, or genitals
- Multiple large blisters
- Child or elderly patient
Third-Degree Burns (Full Thickness)
What it looks like:
- White, brown, or charred
- Leathery texture
- May NOT be painful (nerves destroyed)
Action: CALL 911 or go to ER immediately.
⏰ The Time Factor
For Cuts:
→ 0-6 hours: Ideal window for closure. Best healing, lowest infection risk.
→ 6-12 hours: Still can close, infection risk increasing.
→ 12+ hours: Often left open to heal, antibiotics likely needed.
For Burns:
Get evaluated same day. Burn severity isn’t always obvious initially. Infection can develop quickly.
What We Do at Night Watch
For Cuts:
- Thorough cleaning and irrigation
- Assess for nerve, tendon, or arterial damage
- Local anesthesia (numbing injection)
- Closure: Stitches, skin glue, or steri-strips depending on location/depth
- Wound care instructions and follow-up
For Burns:
- Assess burn depth and extent
- Clean and debride if needed
- Apply specialized burn dressings
- Pain management
- Antibiotics if infection risk high
- Refer to burn specialist if severe
Common Mistakes
For Cuts:
- Using super glue or duct tape (not sterile, risks infection)
- Assuming “it’ll be fine” (deep cuts need proper closure)
- Waiting days to seek care (infection sets in)
- Not checking tetanus status
For Burns:
- Putting ice directly on burn (damages tissue further)
- Applying butter, oil, or toothpaste (old wives’ tales, don’t work)
- Popping blisters (infection risk)
- Underestimating severity (“it’s just a little burn”)
🩹 Proper First Aid
For Cuts:
- Apply direct pressure with clean cloth (10 minutes minimum)
- Elevate above heart if possible
- Once bleeding stops, rinse with clean water
- Cover with clean bandage, then seek care if needed
For Burns:
- Remove from heat source immediately
- Cool under running water (not ice) for 10-20 minutes
- Remove jewelry/tight clothing from area
- Cover with clean, dry cloth
- Seek medical care if criteria met
The Bottom Line
→ When in doubt, come in. Better to have it checked.
→ Time matters. Don’t wait days.
→ Deep cuts need professional closure.
→ Second-degree burns need evaluation.
→ Face and hand injuries always get checked.
🔪 “Does this need stitches?” We can tell you for sure.
Get it checked before it gets infected.
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