Heat Stroke Symptoms
- Vomiting
- Headache
- Confusion or agitation
- Muscle weakness
- Not sweating in the heat
- Seizures
- Nausea
- Fast pulse or rapid breathing
- Fainting
- Loss of appetite
- Stay hydrated! Staying hydrated prevents you from losing too much liquid in your body by sweating.
- Wear loose clothing. As much as you want to wear as little clothing as possible, wearing loose, billowy clothing is actually much better for keeping you cool because of how little it actually touches your body, while also protecting you from the sun's harmful rays.
- WEAR SUNSCREEN!!! This should go without saying, but sunscreen should be applied regularly, and only contain SPF 30 or higher.
- Try to avoid being outside. Less exposure to the sun means less risk.
- Try not to drink very much alcohol or coffee. Both of these drinks are dehydrating, and being hydrated is one of your main defenses against heat stroke.
- Avoid heavy exercise
- Invest in a fan. For a floor fan, try this bestselling, oscillating one.
- Eating foods with heavy water concentrations, such as watermelon, cucumbers, and celery
- Call 911 immediately if you suspect someone has heat stroke. The longer you wait for medical treatment, the worse the condition.
- Keep them as cool as possible. Move them to an air-conditioned area, if you can, or at least as far out of direct sunlight as you can find.
- Put them in cold water, such as a shower or bath. Natural bodies of water work too, as long as they're cold and the patient has no risk of drowning.
- Fan them while spraying them with cold water.
- Put them in an ice bath, BUT only if they got heat stroke from exercising. It's dangerous to put children or senior citizens in an ice bath, and especially if it wasn't sustained while exercising.
- Put ice packs in sensitive places close to blood vessels. Ice packs are best around the neck, armpits, groin, back, and inner knees. You can buy a pack of 24 disposable ice packs, and keep them in your first aid kit in case of an emergency.
- Have them drink lots of water
- Check their body temperature regularly
- Make sure they're lying down, with their feet slightly propped up
- Diabetes
- Alcoholism
- High blood pressure
- Physically exhausting jobs, such as gardening
- Recreational drug usage
- Mental illnesses
- Certain medicines, including antihistamines, diuretics, SSRIs, antipsychotics, and heart medicine.
Swimming may be a good way to keep cool, but always remember to drink water and apply sunscreen. Another way to keep cool and have fun this summer is to explore some. Museums and libraries typically have air-conditioning, along with some interesting things you might not have seen before. Heat exhaustion is often a precursor to heat stroke, so if you feel fatigued after spending some time in the sun, get to someplace cool as soon as possible, and start rehydrating.
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