★★☆☆☆ Easy 15-30 min

Treating Wounds in the Field

Clean, close, and dress wounds when you're hours from a hospital. The basics that prevent infection and save lives.

What You'll Need

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Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. 01

    Control the bleeding

    Apply direct pressure with the cleanest material available. Hold firmly for 10-15 minutes without peeking. Elevate the wound above the heart if possible. For severe bleeding, pack the wound with gauze and maintain pressure. Don't use a tourniquet unless the bleeding is life-threatening and cannot be stopped by pressure.

  2. 02

    Clean the wound thoroughly

    Irrigation is the single most important step for preventing infection. Use clean water with pressure — a squeeze bottle or punctured water bottle cap works. Flush the wound aggressively. Remove all visible dirt and debris. This hurts. Do it anyway.

    Warning: Do NOT use hydrogen peroxide, alcohol, or iodine directly in the wound. These damage tissue and slow healing. Clean water irrigation is more effective.
  3. 03

    Close the wound edges

    For clean cuts with straight edges, use butterfly closures or steri-strips. Apply perpendicular to the wound, pulling the edges together without overlapping. Space closures 1/4 inch apart. Don't close puncture wounds or animal bites — they need to drain.

  4. 04

    Apply antibiotic and dress

    Apply a thin layer of antibiotic ointment. In a survival situation, raw honey is a proven antimicrobial alternative. Cover with clean gauze and secure with tape. The dressing should be snug but not tight enough to restrict blood flow.

  5. 05

    Monitor for infection

    Check twice daily. Warning signs: increasing redness spreading from wound, red streaking up the limb, increasing pain after 48 hours, pus, fever, or foul smell. Infection onset is usually 24-72 hours after injury. If signs appear, clean again and seek medical help.

Pro Tips

  • Superglue (cyanoacrylate) can close small cuts in a pinch. It was literally invented for battlefield wound closure.
  • Keep wounds moist — they heal faster. Change dressings daily and reapply ointment.
  • In a kit, butterfly closures are more versatile than band-aids. They close any size cut.
  • Raw honey has been used to treat wounds for 4,000 years. Modern studies confirm its antibacterial properties.