First-Aid for the Eyes
First-Aid for the Eyes
To reduce the risk of permanent damage caused by eye injuries, it is important to treat eye injuries immediately. Talk with your child's healthcare provider, or ophthalmologist or optometrist (eye care specialists) as soon as possible.
First-aid for cuts in or around the eye
Do's and don'ts include:
Gently bandage your child's eye.
Do not apply pressure to your child's eye.
Instruct your child not to rub his or her eye.
Do not try to remove any particles from your child's eye.
Do not wash out your child's eye.
First-aid for foreign objects in the eye
Here are ways to help your child:
Instruct your child not to rub his or her eye.
Pull your child's upper lid down onto lower lid and instruct him or her to blink repeatedly. The lower eyelashes may sweep the particle away.
Use an eye wash to wash out the speck or object from your child's eye.
Instruct your child to close his or her eye.
You should seek medical attention immediately if the above procedures do not work.
First-aid for chemical splashes
Here is what you can do:
Use fingers to separate your child's eyelids, then flush his or her eye with water from a faucet or clean container.
Seek medical attention immediately.
Cover your child's eye.
First-aid for physical trauma to the eye
Here is what you can do:
Immediately, but gently, apply small cold compresses to your child's eye without applying pressure to reduce pain and swelling.
Contact your child's healthcare provider, or ophthalmologist or optometrist (eye care specialists) immediately.
Updated:  
March 21, 2017
Reviewed By:  
Bogus, William J., OD, FAAO,Griggs, Paul B., MD