Life saving first aid tips for snake bites

The summer holiday is the ideal time to go camping and what better way to unwind from a tough year than spending time with family and friends in a bush with a bonfire. Unfortunately, summer is also the time when snakes and other reptiles are awake and hunting.

POLOKWANE – Review spoke to snake catcher, Chris Burger, about what to do when you have an uninvited and scaly visitor at your camp site.

“Since people do not really know what snakes are venomous or not, all snake should be treated as if they are dangerous. The best plan to ensure snakes do not visit your campsite is to keep the area clean. Snakes eat rats and mice who are attracted to rubbish and food lying around the campsite. If you keep the campsite clean, there will likely not be any rats which will attract snakes.”

Other reasons why snakes might show visit your campsite is that you may be camping close to a river where there are frogs. Some snakes eat frogs or even birds which attract snakes.

Although it is not likely that slithering visitors will be aggressive and bite, it is still helpful to know what to do if they do happen to bite.

First aid for a snakebite:

See details below.

Pressure immobilisation: Apply a broad bandage and wrap from the distal to the proximal limb to occlude the lymphatic system and trap the venom bolus in the area of injection. It should be wrapped as tight as for a sprained ankle, and the limb should be immobilised. Note that both these conditions need to be met in order for this method to be effective. This is effective treatment for neurotoxic snake bites. It is not indicated for cytotoxic bites as it may aggravate this type of syndrome.

It does not work in the case of mamba bites as mamba venom is transported away from the bite site through the circulation.

Tourniquet: Apply a broad bandage or ligature (50 mm) around the upper arm for a bite on the hand or forearm, and upper leg for a bite on the foot or lower leg. The tourniquet should be tight enough to prevent inflow and outflow of any blood. Make a note of the time you applied the tourniquet. Do not keep it in place for more than one and a half hours as permanent damage to the limb may be caused. Also note tourniquets are painful as all the blood and nerve vessels are compressed. Never use a tourniquet if you have identified the snake as an adder or spitting cobra.

First aid for spitting snake:

Venom in the eyes is not life threatening and no antivenom is needed.

maretha@nmgroup.co.za

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