Today I got an iPhone 4. Does it come with an alarm clock feature? If so, how do I get to it? If it does not have one, how can I get one?
Water is the better, but a blanket is better than nothing when you can't get to water, or can't get water to the patient.
By put water on burns if you don't the pain and heat that you still feel or the patient still feels is the meat still cooking. By putting the burn under running water it will slow or may even stop the cooking process. The blanket isn't going to do anything.
Pig skins normally fairly good. Though great big slabs of flesh in the fridge first thing in the morning can be a little scary. (there was a head once) It isn't amazingly expensive, and you can usually strike a good deal with the butcher. I'm not sure about rubbers though. I don't think I know anyone whos really practiced on that, its a bit too expensive for what it is. And oranges are crap, too small, too rounded and too bumpy
If a human is ON FIRE the fire should be doused the fastest way possible. It doesn't matter whether it is done with a blanket, a fire extinguisher, water, or rolling on the ground. Whatever kills the fire fastest is what should be used. Time is the only factor to consider (aside from the safety of the victim of course, don't rll them off a cliff). After the fire has been extinguished the burn should be FLOODED, not drizzled, with water. A burn is basically a big bag of boiling fat and water under the skin. Just because the fire has been removed that doesn't mean the fat and water cool down. They stay hot just like fat and water in a pan stay hot. And as long as they stay hot they keep doing damage and the burn keeps getting bigger and deeper. It is crucial to get the heat out of the burn as fast as possible. The more water you flood the wound with the more heat it will carry away and the less severe the burn will be. Do not leave the wound in a blanket. The blanket will trap the heat and prevent even air cooling. That will reuslt in a very severe burn. If you have no water just leave the wound exposed to the air so it can cool as fast as possible. Keep washing the burn with cold water for at least 5 minutes. If it is cold and the burn covers a very large area then keep an eye on the patient's temperature, but in the case of severe burns the risk form the burn is far greater than the risk from hypothermia so apply water anyway.
it isn't good instead you should use alvero because if you put cold water on it immediatly it could make the burn worse and cause the skin to peel