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Medicine Cabinet
A well stocked first aid kit is essential for any home.
Avoid storing medicines or dressings in a bathroom as the
warm, moist atmosphere will encourage deterioration and
mould.
A few tips:
- Keep medicines locked away or high up out of reach of
children.
- Always keep medicines in their original containers,
together with instruction sheets.
- Check use by dates of medicines and sealed dressing
regularly.
- Never use a medicine that is out of date.
- Don't use any medicines that have leaked, changed
colour, smell odd, or have changed in any way.
- Return expired medicines to your pharmacist for safe
disposal.
- Replenish stocks as soon as they are used up.
Suggested check list that your medicine cabinet could
include:
- Digital thermometer.
- Blunt-ended scissors.
- Fine tweezers.
- Safety Pins.
- Antiseptic wipes or cream.
- Assorted plasters designed for blisters, bleeding
wounds, burns and scalds, grazes, deeper cuts and awkward
contours.
- Surgical tape.
- Painkillers
- Insect sting pain reliever spray or 1 percent
hydrocortisone cream, also relieves sunburn.
More and more people are using natural remedies for
first aid, some good ones to try include:
- Clove oil for toothache.
- Arnica cream, a homeopathic remedy for bruises, aches,
sprains and stings.
- Ale vera gel for soothing sore skin, and taking the
sting out of sunburn.
- Tea tree oil products such as antiseptic.
- Lavender essential oil to treat burns and insect bites.
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