Drinking rat poison after the scene of first aid There are rats in the house, inevitably placed rat poison, but how to do after the accidental or self-inflicted? Rodenticide is divided into two categories: fast-acting and late-acting. Quick-acting drugs such as zinc phosphide, sodium fluoroacetate, etc. Late-acting rodenticides such as sodium salt of diphacin, mirex, rodenticide ether and other anti-coagulant rodenticides. Commonly used on-site first aid methods are 1, vomiting: stimulate the throat with chopsticks to cause vomiting; 2, diarrhea: oral liquid paraffin to reduce the absorption of poison; 2, forbidden to eat milk, internal class, grease, because the phosphorus-containing components of rat poison can be dissolved in fat and increased absorption; 4, sodium fluoroacetate poisoning can be intramuscular injection of vitamin K1. Treatment of sodium fluoroacetate rat poisoning Sodium fluoroacetate rat poison is extremely toxic to humans. The main symptom is the poisoning of the nervous system. The onset of poisoning usually occurs in half to two hours, with headache, nausea, vomiting and epigastric pain in mild cases, and irritability, paroxysmal convulsions, respiratory depression, cyanosis, drop in blood pressure and urinary and fecal incontinence in severe cases. In addition to vomiting, gastric lavage, diarrhea, and cleaning of contaminated skin, timely symptomatic treatment is extremely important in the treatment of sodium fluoroacetate poisoning. In mild cases, sedatives, painkillers and atropine can be given. In serious cases, the first consideration should be to control convulsions and keep the airway open. In case of convulsions and convulsions, tranquilizers should be given promptly. Acetamide is used as a special antidote for fluoroacetic acid poisoning. Prevention of rodent poisoning 1. First of all, replace highly toxic rodenticides with highly efficient and low-toxic rodenticides. 2. When using poisonous bait to exterminate rats, the bait must be placed in the bait box that only rats can enter; 3. The corpses of rats and livestock that die from poisoning by rodenticide must be burned or buried in time to avoid secondary poisoning by other animals; 4. Therefore, rat poison should not be mixed with ordinary drugs, and all drugs should be kept out of reach of children.