social

Alternatives to Bandaids?

January 27, 2006

Blue first aid kit.Does anyone have any ideas for substitutes for Band Aids? It seems that certain parts of my skin, i.e. inside forearm, tummy, back of hand, etc., have become very sensitive to the adhesive. I actually have one place that looks like the sticky part has left a scar. I'm hoping it will eventually go away, but who knows.

Advertisement



Thanks for any help.

Answers

By Jen (Guest Post)
January 27, 20060 found this helpful
Best Answer

I use the Band-Aids that are designed to stay on for up to a week. Their adhesive is different, so it doesn't cause me discomfort. I also make sure I buy latex-free bandages; you might have a latex sensitivity.

 

Gold Feedback Medal for All Time! 791 Feedbacks
January 27, 20060 found this helpful
Best Answer

You can buy paper tape designed especially for adhesive-sensitive people. I've never seen a Band Aid made with it, though. I just use gauze with it.

 
By Leigh Ann (Guest Post)
January 27, 20060 found this helpful
Best Answer

Try New Skin. It's a product in a tiny little brown bottle with an applicator in it. You will find it uncomfortable at first, but blow on it to dry the liquid and you will never use a band aid again.

Advertisement

True to the name, it acts like new skin. Ask your local pharmacy or discount store.

 
January 27, 20060 found this helpful
Best Answer

I, too, am allergic to regular Band-Aids. I use the stretch gauze with gauze pads. Works great! And, yes, the marks you have from the Band-Aid will go away eventually.

 
Answer this Question

January 7, 2015

I play basketball and once every 3 month I sprain my ankle playing. Now my doctors, coach, everyone advises me to, wrap my ankle with tape before training, but I'm allergic to tape. What can I use instead of that tape, that can be a suport for that ankle?

By Simone R

Answers

January 9, 20150 found this helpful

I'd use one of those ankle support things that are made of elastic bandage fabric. Or get an athletic ankle support.

 

Bronze Answer Medal for All Time! 220 Answers
January 10, 20150 found this helpful

Also consider buying an ankle support made of fabric and elastic. You can try local pharmacies and also medical supply firms. There are many sites online to consider, also.

 
January 10, 20150 found this helpful

Try buying non latex tape instead of the usual stuff. I had the same problem but by using this tape there is no problem.

 
Read More Answers

January 5, 2015

My husband has very thin skin. When removing a "regular" Band-aid from a wound site, he will pull up skin with the adhesive, creating another wound site! Does anyone know if there is an actual Band-Aid which uses "paper tape"? I know there is a paper tape, but it needs a gauze pad; then, there is the self-adhesive wrap. But, for a "quick and easy" solution, I would like to have an actual "workable" Band-Aid on hand.

By V.L.

Answers

January 7, 20150 found this helpful

Have you tried putting tissue on the wounds and letting the blood as it dries to adhere the tissue; like what a man would do if he cut himself shaving? Then when it is time for it to come off just wet it.

 
January 7, 20150 found this helpful

There is a product you can buy in the first aid aisle that comes in a roll. It is a soft, stretchable tape that comes in small widths and it looks wrinkly in the package. When you unroll it to cover a wound of any kind, you can stretch it a little, then the end of it will stick to its opposite end. It's wonderful because you can put anything under it (TP folded or gauze pads of any size, etc.

Advertisement

plus medication) and hold it in place as long as you need. It's also reusable which makes it a real $ saver. Wish I knew the name of this product because it's great. I've found many uses for it around the house.

 

Silver Feedback Medal for All Time! 337 Feedbacks
January 8, 20150 found this helpful

If you ask advice from your pharmacist, they can likely steer you toward a suitable bandage product.

 
October 28, 20170 found this helpful

I think the product might be Nexcare Coban Self-Adhering Wrap.

 
April 10, 20180 found this helpful

It sounds similar to Vet Wrap ! We use it on pets with wounds.

 
Read More Answers

June 1, 2012

I have Bell's palsy and am allergic to the adhesive on Band aids and paper tape. I am having a terrible time trying to tape my eye closed. Does anybody have an alternative to tape to keep my eye shut at night? I have scabs from where I taped my eye shut. I am allergic to carbs mix, wood alcohols and e-phenylelnediamine. Anybody have suggestions?

By Patty R

Answers

November 18, 20160 found this helpful
Best Answer

Mrs Joe, to keep the patches on your eyes, use one of those eye sleeping masks. Could hep make an easier transition.
All the best!

 
Answer this Question

September 28, 2010

I have a friend that's having bad reactions to Bandaids. We are trying to find something to keep ouches covered. I can't find a strong enough tape to hold just gauze on. Any suggestions?

By BHCBADGIRL from MT

Answers

September 28, 20100 found this helpful

They have cloth bandages just for folks who encounter this! They also have "white" medical tape which I am not sure will cause a reaction or not; check with your local pharmacist or drug store!

 

Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 138 Feedbacks
September 28, 20100 found this helpful

I have a reaction to adhesives and I do better with the paper tape sold in rolls, but it doesn't stick as well as regular bandaids. I also tolerate the fabric bandaids better, for some reason.

 

Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 109 Feedbacks
September 28, 20101 found this helpful

Use duct tape. On a job once my boss got a pretty deep cut and put duct tape over it. Nothing else. When he went to the doctor (when we finished for the day) the doctor was impressed and told him that was probably the best solution for the cut he had because the tape itself was sterile and it was strong enough to hold the cut.

Advertisement

He required three stitches. And this was 5 hours after finishing a carpet job and driving back to civilizaton.

 
September 30, 20100 found this helpful

Try Coban tape by 3M, self adhesive, recommended by my hand doctor after some surgery, works great.

 
September 30, 20100 found this helpful

My mom (who passed away in Aug. 2009 from lung cancer) had a terrible allergy to most of the adhesives in tape and bandaids. Most of the time, the tape/bandage would cause more damage than the sore she had been trying to heal.

Advertisement

Her Oncologist gave her a roll of "paper tape" that worked like a charm. It had very strong adhesive qualities, but didn't irritate her skin at all! You can find it at Walgreen's.

God Bless,
Sheila in Springfield, IL

 
September 30, 20100 found this helpful

You could try "new skin liquid bandage". You just spray it on the open sore. My husband loves it (I haven't had a sore to try it on). It has an antiseptic in it too.

 
September 30, 20100 found this helpful

I have the same problem and have found out I am allergic to latex. Paper bandages work on me. I also have to tell the docto and dentist office that I'm allergic to latex so they can use non-latex gloves.

Advertisement

If they use regular gloves at the dentist, the next day my face where they touched is covered in little itchy bumps under the skin. It has been this way all my life.

 
September 30, 20100 found this helpful

I am allergic to tape and must use it on ostomy bags. I've found that hockey stick tape works great.

 
October 1, 20100 found this helpful

You can also use a cotton strip, winding it over the bandage and taping the outside of the cotton (like binding up a sprained ankle). I don't know if your country has them but in Japan we can also get cotton mesh tubes that are finger size, arm size and head size, to hold gauze on wounds. You can use the fingers cut off a glove, cuff of a sock, etc. My daughter is allergic to both latex and adhesive!

 
October 2, 20101 found this helpful

You can buy this athletic tape like stuff, the labs use it to hold on the cotton over the place they take your blood. It comes in fun colors as well. Just use that wrapping it around a few times over the bandage and it will stay in place. Good luck.

 
June 3, 20121 found this helpful

Maybe you could just try a sleep mask and eliminate having to use anything with adhesive at all.

 
Read More Answers
<< First< Previous
Categories
Health & Beauty AdviceSeptember 6, 2013
Pages
More
👒
Mother's Day Ideas!
👔
Father's Day Ideas!
🌻
Gardening
Facebook
Pinterest
YouTube
Instagram
Categories
Better LivingBudget & FinanceBusiness and LegalComputersConsumer AdviceCoronavirusCraftsEducationEntertainmentFood and RecipesHealth & BeautyHolidays and PartiesHome and GardenMake Your OwnOrganizingParentingPetsPhotosTravel and RecreationWeddings
Published by ThriftyFun.
Desktop Page | View Mobile
Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Contact Us
Generated 2024-04-24 13:06:27 in 8 secs. ⛅️️
© 1997-2024 by Cumuli, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
https://www.thriftyfun.com/Alternatives-to-Bandaids.html