Call 911 Now
- 2nd or 3rd degree burn covers a large area
- Trouble breathing with burn to the face
- Trouble breathing after being near fire, smoke or fumes
- Hard to wake up
- Acts or talks confused
- You think your child has a life-threatening emergency
Call Doctor or Seek Care Now
- Eye or eyelid burn
- Burn goes all the way around an arm or leg
- Blistered burn and No past tetanus shots. Note: tetanus is the "T" in DTaP, TdaP, or Td vaccines.
- Center of the burn is white or charred
- Electrical burn
- Explosion or gun powder caused the burn
- Chemical burn (such as acid)
- Coughing after being near fire and smoke
- House fire burn
- Severe pain and not better 2 hours after taking pain medicine
- Burn looks infected (spreading redness, red streaks, swelling, or tender to the touch)
- You think your child has a serious burn
- You think your child needs to be seen, and the problem is urgent
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Contact Doctor Within 24 Hours
- Blister is present. Exception: small closed blister less than ½ inch or 12 mm size.
- Minor burn and last tetanus shot more than 10 years ago
- Burn looks dirty or is hard to clean and last tetanus shot more than 5 years ago
- You think your child needs to be seen, but the problem is not urgent
Contact Doctor During Office Hours
- Burn not healed after 10 days
- You have other questions or concerns
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Self Care at Home
- Minor heat or chemical burn
- Blisters less than ½ inch (12 mm) size
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