Coming Soon: New Building for Children's Specialty Care
Our new Children's Health Specialty Clinics building will bring 30 pediatric specialties together under one roof, making it easier for families to get expert care.
An electrical burn is a skin burn that results from contact with electricity. When this happens, electricity can travel through your body damaging tissues and organs. The level of injury to the body depends on the type of circuit (AC or CD), the level of voltage and amperage, the way in which the current entered the body, and how long the exposure was.
Call or send someone to call 911 for emergency medical help whenever an electrical burn occurs. Serious electrical injuries may be life-threatening.
Check to see if the person is still in contact with the electrical current. If so, don't touch them until you turn off the source or the circuit breaker.
Check to see if the person is still breathing. Call or send someone to call 911 and start cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) immediately if the person isn't breathing.
Be aware that a person may go into "shock" after an electrical burn. Don't leave them alone.
Don't give the person anything to eat or drink.
Move the person as little as possible. Severe electric shock may have caused a spinal fracture.
Our new Children's Health Specialty Clinics building will bring 30 pediatric specialties together under one roof, making it easier for families to get expert care.