at an incident, someone is suffering from severe burns. how could you help them?
If someone at an incident has severe burns, your main job is to protect their life and prevent the injury from getting worse until emergency help arrives.
Quick Scoop: Severe Burns – How You Could Help
In driving theory and real-life emergencies, the “right” answer is always: keep them alive, keep them safe, and get professional help fast.
1. First: Think “DANGER – 999/112/911”
Severe burns are a medical emergency. Act in this order:
- Check it’s safe for you
- Stay clear of fire, smoke, chemicals, electricity or hot metal until they’re turned off/removed.
* Do not become a second casualty.
- Call emergency services immediately
- Give location, what caused the burn (flames, chemicals, electricity, explosion, hot liquid), and how many people are hurt.
* Put the phone on speaker so you can follow instructions while helping.
- Do not move them unless you must
- Move only if there’s immediate danger (fire, explosion risk, building collapse).
2. What “Severe Burns” Look Like
These signs mean: treat as a major burn and call an ambulance:
- Burn is large (bigger than the person’s hand, or > about 8 cm / 3 inches).
- Skin looks white, brown, black, leathery or charred.
- Burn is on face, hands, feet, groin, buttocks, over a major joint, or wraps all the way around a limb.
- There is difficulty breathing, burns to mouth/nose, or suspected smoke inhalation.
- There are electrical or chemical burns.
In a driving theory context, anything that sounds serious or life‑threatening means you should choose the option that gets professional help and protects the casualty, not cosmetic or “home remedy” actions.
3. Step‑by‑Step: How You Could Help Them
Think of it like a simple sequence: stop the burning – cool the burn – cover – watch for shock – reassure.
3.1 Stop the burning
- Turn off the source if you can do it safely
- Turn off electricity at the mains, move them away from hot liquid, extinguish flames (stop, drop, roll if they’re on fire).
- Do not pull off clothing that is stuck to the burn; cut around it instead.
3.2 Cool the burn – but safely
For large or severe burns:
- Cool the burned area with cool running water , ideally for up to 20 minutes.
- Use cool water, not ice, iced water, creams, or butter; those can cause more damage or hypothermia.
- For big burns, avoid soaking their whole body in cold water – that can drop their body temperature dangerously.
If you’re doing a theory-test style question, the best option is usually “cool the burn with cool running water” rather than “apply ointment/cream/butter” or “burst blisters”.
3.3 Remove tight items early
- Gently remove rings, bracelets, watches, belts or tight clothing near (not stuck in) the burned area, because swelling builds quickly.
3.4 Cover the burn
- Use a clean , non‑fluffy dressing: sterile gauze, a clean cloth, or non‑stick dressing.
- Cover it loosely to protect from infection and reduce pain.
- If fingers/toes are burned, lightly separate them with clean, non‑adhesive material.
3.5 Watch for and treat shock
Severe burns can cause shock , which is life‑threatening.
Signs include:
- Cold, clammy, pale or grey skin
- Fast, weak pulse
- Rapid, shallow breathing, confusion, or fainting
What you can do:
- Help them lie down on their back if possible.
- Raise their legs slightly (unless you suspect spinal injury or it causes pain).
- Keep them warm with a coat or blanket, but don’t cover the burn itself with fluffy material.
- Reassure them, stay calm and keep talking to them until help arrives.
4. What You Must Not Do
These are common myths or classic “wrong answers” in test questions:
- Do not put ice or ice packs directly on the burn.
- Do not apply creams, oils, butter, toothpaste, egg whites, powder, etc.
- Do not burst blisters.
- Do not remove clothing stuck to the burn.
- Do not give them food or drink if they are likely to have surgery soon (in a real emergency, this is for doctors to advise).
- Do not delay calling emergency services while you “see if it gets better”.
On a theory question, avoid answers that mention ointments, adhesive plasters over the burn, or breaking blisters; these are usually distractors.
5. How This Fits Typical Test Answers
That specific phrasing:
“At an incident, someone is suffering from severe burns. How could you help them?”
is used in UK-style driving theory resources.
The best style of answer generally looks like:
- Cool the burn with clean, cool running water for at least 10–20 minutes, remove any constricting items, then cover the burn with a clean, non‑fluffy dressing and treat for shock while waiting for medical help.
If you want, paste the multiple-choice options you’re seeing and I can tell you which is most consistent with official first‑aid guidance.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.