Chemical burns can happen in an instant.

A preschooler spills drain cleaner and slips in the puddle. A teenager sustains a chemical burn to their face during chemistry class. These injuries occur when a person’s skin or eyes come in direct contact with strong chemicals, such as lye or some household-cleaning agents. The amount of time a child is in contact with the chemical and how strong it is play a big role in just how severe the burn may be.

Chemical burns can be serious and painful, and cause families fear and uncertainty about where to turn for answers. It is important for children to receive prompt assessment and treatment for a chemical burn.

At Shriners Children’s our burn care teams are skilled at assessing these injuries and providing innovative burn care treatments. We are not only prepared to care for a child immediately following a chemical burn, but can meet their needs throughout the duration of their recovery and childhood.

Shriners Children's Burn Care Accreditation

Three Shriners Children's locations providing burn care are accredited by the American Burn Association (ABA) and the American College of Surgeons (ACS) as verified pediatric burn centers.

We have a strong connection to and history with the ABA. All of the Shriners Children's burn care chiefs of staff at the above locations have been presidents of the ABA. These distinctions display the depth of the burn care support services we provide, as well as the vast amounts of research we lead on behalf of our patients and children around the world who’ve been burned.

Specific treatments and services may vary by location. Please contact a specific location for more information.

Emergency Treatment of Chemical Burns

Burn injuries are painful and frightening. In the moments after a chemical burn on the skin happens, it is most important to stop the burning process. Many people do not realize that burns can continue to worsen even after the chemical or other heat source is removed.

If your child is burned by chemicals:

  • Flush the area with large quantities of cool water to dilute and remove the chemical from the skin.
  • Dry chemicals should be brushed off the skin, and the area flushed with large quantities of cool water.
  • Identify the chemical and contact poison control for additional instructions.
  • Seek immediate medical attention and call 911 if necessary. If emergency transport is needed, EMS should flush eyes with water or saline during transport.
  • Once the injury has been assessed in an emergency setting, seek care at a healthcare facility with pediatric burn expertise.

A Reference for School Nurses on Burn Care for School-Age Children

Burn injuries are among the most painful injuries any child can endure. School nurses are at the front line when children are burned at school. An 8-year-old boy comes to your office with redness and blistering on his right forearm after he accidentally spilled hot soup on himself. A 14-year-old girl splashes chemicals on to her hand during science class. These children are in pain and in need of immediate treatment. What should you do?

This guide covers types of burns, initial assessment and treatment, and how to determine when a child needs to be evaluated by a physician.

What Is a Burn?

A burn is an injury to the skin from an energy source, including heat, chemical, electric or kinetic. Scalds burns, burns caused by hot liquids, are the most common cause of burn injury in young school-age children. At 150°F, it takes less than one second for a deep burn injury to occur. At 120°F, it takes two minutes of contact.

How Do I Assess the Burn?

When assessing the burn, note the depth, size, and location of the injury.

What Are the Degrees of a Burn?

The depth of a burn depends on how many layers of skin the burn penetrates. It is important to keep in mind that a burn will continue to progress in depth for the first 48-72 hours, so follow-up assessment of the injury is mandatory to accurately determine depth.

  • A first degree burn affects only the epidermis. The skin remains intact but is reddened. These burns are painful initially. Fortunately, the redness and the pain will subside in three to five days and no scarring usually occurs.
  • A second degree burn has gone through the epidermis and affects the dermis, which is the deeper layer of skin. Blistering occurs because of the skin damage. The exposed dermis is pink and can vary from moist to dry depending on the depth of the injury.
    • Superficial second degree burn wounds can take from 7–21 days to form the first layer of fragile new skin. This new skin can then take another one to two months to mature back to usual thickness. The color will often take several months and sometimes up to a year to return to the usual pigmentation. Usually, superficial second degree burns do not form raised scars.
    • Deep second degree burn wounds can take four to six weeks before the wound can finally close. These wounds are at increased risk of forming raised scars.
  • A third degree burn goes through all the layers of the skin down to the subcutaneous tissue or even deeper. These burns can be deceptively painless because the skin nerves have been destroyed. A third degree burn will appear leathery and have no noticeable blanching. These wounds require surgical skin grafting for treatment.

How Do I Assess the Size of the Burn?

For small burns (smaller than a handprint), a ruler can be used to measure in centimeters. For burns larger than a handprint, you can obtain a quick estimate by using the child’s hand. The area of the hand (palm + fingers) is approximately equal to 1% of the total body surface area (TBSA). Burn specialists prefer to describe burns with regards to percentage of TBSA.

In general, burn injuries larger than 5 cm (or 2 inches) in diameter should be seen as soon as possible by a medical provider.

When Does a Student Need to be Sent Directly to the Emergency Room?

The American Burn Association suggests the following criteria for urgent evaluation of a burn injury:

  • Second degree burn injury greater than 10% TBSA (which is approximately an entire arm from hand to shoulder)
  • Any third degree burn injury
  • Burn injuries to sensitive areas (eyes, face, joints, genital region)
  • Patients with medical co-morbidities
  • Any suspicion of child abuse

How Should I Initially Manage a Burn?

The first steps are to stop the burning process! If emergency assistance is required, call 911.

  • For all thermal burns, remove any affected clothing and cool the area with cool running water for at least two minutes. Avoid applying ice packs – ice will cause vasoconstriction, decreasing the blood flow to the wound, potentially worsening the injury.
  • Chemical burn treatment requires ample irrigation with water to remove wet chemicals from the skin. Dry chemicals should be brushed off first, before starting irrigation. Eyes injured by the chemical agent should be flushed with either water or saline for at least 20 minutes and then sent for evaluation by a medical provider.

What Should I Do About Any Blisters?

For patients going to see a medical provider, the blisters may be left intact. Pain from a burn wound can increase significantly once the wound bed is open to air. Pain medication is recommended prior to unroofing of blisters.

How Should I Cover the Burned Areas After Cooling and/or Irrigation?

If the patient is being sent to a medical provider immediately, just cover the burn wound with a clean, dry dressing.

Otherwise, if the student is going home after school following a chemical burn on the skin, to provide comfort and decrease risk of infection, a dressing of bacitracin ointment with gauze bandage should be applied to the burned area. Bacitracin ointment will cover the most common bacteria on the skin. Triple antibiotic ointment can also be used if bacitracin is not available.

Who Can I Contact if I Have Any Questions or am Uncertain About the Burn Injury?

If emergency assistance is required, call 911. Your closest burn center will always welcome inquiries and questions. Shriners Children’s operates verified burn centers in Massachusetts, Ohio, Texas and California.

You don’t know the future, but now Emma can run all the way around the track at her school! The nurses at Shriners [Children's] always made her feel special, so she knows she can do whatever she sets out to do.
Christina, Ohio
patient wearing pressure garment with mom

Pressure Garment Therapy Advances the Prevention of Hypertrophic (Raised) Scarring

Shriners Children's leads the way in the advancement of children's burn care, including our use of pressure garments to reduce raised, or hypertrophic, scarring without surgery.

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Next Steps

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