steve115cbr
New Bee
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2010
- Messages
- 16
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Witney Oxfordshire
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 2
Dear all, you need to keep this in context, anaphalyaxis whilst potentially lethal is actually rare. 20 years ago no body had ever heard of it and no one ever panicked if and when they got stung. who like me, (the wrong side of 40) ever had or remembers anyone having a problem after being stung as a child?? suddenly anyone that gets stung suddenly flies into a mad panic, hyperventilates, thinks they can't breath, tell you they can't breath, pulse goes through the roof when in reality they just need to calm down. 95% of the people I see having a suspected anaphyactic reaction are not, and to give them a dose of adrenaline when their body is already running in overdrive with it's own adrenaline kicking in because of the panic is very dangerous and potentially lethal. Real anaphylactic reactions cause blotching of the skin, dangerous drop in blood pressure, massive facial swelling which can close the eyes and more importantly cause the tounge and lips to swell to such an extent that they really cannot breath and as such cannot talk. these people need the adrenaline!!.
another thing about anaphylaxis is that you have to have been exposed to the trigger before and normally lot of times before, so you cannot suffer a reaction on your first time so the "how will i know if I have an allegy" argument should be dismissed.
lastly Rosti is right to consider the risks of giving someone else your epipen, adrenaline is a prescription only medication and unless you are authorized to prescribe it and know the indications and contra-indications for it's use, you could end up in serious trouble if you gave it to someone who then went on to die due to a cardiac problem caused by the adrenaline (the adrenaline in epipens is 10x stronger than the adrenaline given in cardiac arrest situations).
if you need an epipen, you probably already have one prescribed. if you don't have one then you probably don't need one.
another thing about anaphylaxis is that you have to have been exposed to the trigger before and normally lot of times before, so you cannot suffer a reaction on your first time so the "how will i know if I have an allegy" argument should be dismissed.
lastly Rosti is right to consider the risks of giving someone else your epipen, adrenaline is a prescription only medication and unless you are authorized to prescribe it and know the indications and contra-indications for it's use, you could end up in serious trouble if you gave it to someone who then went on to die due to a cardiac problem caused by the adrenaline (the adrenaline in epipens is 10x stronger than the adrenaline given in cardiac arrest situations).
if you need an epipen, you probably already have one prescribed. if you don't have one then you probably don't need one.
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