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Hurricane Wound Care & Tetanus Risk — What Every Survivor Needs to Know
Hurricane Health Series · Wound Care & Infection Prevention

Hurricane Wound Care & Tetanus Risk — What Debris Injuries Can Cost You

Nail punctures, cuts from debris, and flood water exposure are among the leading causes of post-hurricane fatalities. Learn the tetanus window, wound care protocol, and when to go to the ER.

397 mi
Coastline
Cat 4
Peak risk
Available
Wind credits
$15–100
Per sq ft
ⓘ General Awareness Notice: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and is not medical, legal, or professional safety advice. In any emergency, call 911 and follow directives from local authorities, FEMA, CDC, and your healthcare provider. Always consult a licensed professional before acting on any information presented here. Full disclaimer →
⚠️ Tales of Caution

The Injuries Nobody Warns You About

Drawn from CDC post-hurricane injury surveillance reports, state trauma center records, and documented post-storm public reports. Names and details in illustrative examples are composites.

St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana — The Nail That Didn't Seem Serious

Robert was 62 years old when he returned to his St. Bernard Parish home after Hurricane Katrina. He spent three weeks doing cleanup — hauling debris, tearing out drywall, pulling up flooring. On the fourteenth day, he stepped on a nail that penetrated through his boot into his left foot. The wound bled briefly, he pulled the nail out, cleaned the area with antiseptic he had on hand, and wrapped it in gauze. He did not seek medical care. He had not had a tetanus booster in over 15 years.

Four days later, Robert experienced jaw stiffness. Within 24 hours, he had developed muscle spasms severe enough to prevent swallowing. He was transported to a New Orleans area hospital with a confirmed tetanus diagnosis. He spent eleven days in the ICU, six of them on a ventilator. His recovery took four months. "I thought it was just a nail," his wife told Louisiana public health officials during a post-Katrina injury study. "We'd both stepped on nails a dozen times in our lives."

What this means for your home: Tetanus (Clostridium tetani) thrives in soil, dust, and rust — exactly the environment of a post-hurricane debris field. Any puncture wound, deep cut, or laceration sustained during hurricane cleanup warrants prompt assessment of your tetanus vaccination status. If your last booster was more than 5 years ago, getting one promptly is advisable. If you cannot confirm your vaccination history, assume you need one.

Galveston, Texas — Vibrio from a Small Cut

Margaret was a 55-year-old healthy woman who returned to her Galveston home after Hurricane Ike in 2008 to begin cleanup. She had a small cut on her lower leg from a minor accident before the storm. During cleanup, she waded through floodwater that covered her street. The cut on her leg was submerged in the water for approximately two hours over two days of cleanup work. She did not cover the wound with waterproof dressing.

Within 36 hours of exposure, the wound had become red and swollen. Within 72 hours, the redness had spread significantly up her leg and she had developed a fever. She presented to a Galveston emergency room with a diagnosis of Vibrio vulnificus infection — a rapidly progressing bacterial infection found in warm coastal waters that becomes extremely dangerous when it enters the bloodstream through open wounds.

Margaret required IV antibiotics, surgical debridement of the infected tissue, and a 12-day hospitalization. "I thought the cut was too small to worry about," she said. "The doctors told me another 12 hours and the outcome could have been very different." Vibrio vulnificus has a case fatality rate of 25–30% in wound infections that progress to bloodstream infection.

What this means for your home: Any open wound — no matter how small — should be covered with a waterproof dressing before any contact with floodwater. Vibrio vulnificus is naturally present in warm Gulf and Atlantic coastal waters and becomes highly concentrated in floodwater. It is not a rare pathogen after hurricanes in coastal states — it is expected. Cover every cut, every abrasion, every scratch before you enter any post-hurricane water.

Sources: CDC post-Katrina injury and illness surveillance; Texas Department of State Health Services Vibrio vulnificus reporting; Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center trauma records.

The injury nobody plans for

Post-hurricane injuries — falls, cuts from debris, puncture wounds, and lacerations — are among the leading causes of storm-related deaths in the days and weeks after landfall. In many major hurricanes, more people die during the cleanup phase than during the storm itself. The debris field of a hurricane is one of the most hazardous environments most Americans will ever work in.

The Tetanus Window

Tetanus — The Window That Matters

Tetanus (lockjaw) is caused by Clostridium tetani bacteria, which produce a toxin that attacks the nervous system. The bacteria are found in soil, dust, animal feces, and rust — all of which are present in abundance in post-hurricane debris fields. Once tetanus toxin reaches the nervous system, it cannot be neutralized by antitoxin. Treatment is supportive only.

The tetanus booster window:

  • Last booster less than 5 years ago — you are protected for clean wounds; for dirty or puncture wounds, consider consulting a doctor
  • Last booster 5–10 years ago — get a booster immediately after any significant wound, especially punctures
  • Last booster more than 10 years ago — get a booster immediately, for any wound
  • Unknown vaccination history — assume unprotected; get Td or Tdap immediately

The tetanus booster must be given within 72 hours of injury to be effective in preventing disease in an unvaccinated person receiving Tetanus Immune Globulin (TIG). Do not wait to see if symptoms develop — by the time tetanus symptoms appear, the toxin has already bound to nerve tissue.

Tetanus boosters are available at emergency rooms, urgent care centers, and many pharmacies. After a declared disaster, local health departments often set up free vaccination sites. Call 211 or check your county health department website for locations.

Wound Care Protocol

Wound Care Protocol for Hurricane Cleanup

Immediate wound care for any cut or puncture during cleanup:

  1. Stop work immediately — do not continue working with an open wound in a debris field or floodwater environment
  2. Remove contaminated clothing away from the wound
  3. Rinse thoroughly — run clean water over the wound for at least 5 minutes; use a syringe or squeeze bottle for puncture wounds to irrigate the depth of the wound
  4. Do not close puncture wounds — puncture wounds should be left open; closing them traps bacteria inside
  5. Apply antibiotic ointment — triple antibiotic ointment to superficial wounds after cleaning
  6. Cover with waterproof dressing — do not return to work without waterproof coverage over the wound
  7. Assess tetanus status — if more than 5 years since last booster, seek care within 72 hours
  8. Monitor closely — increasing redness, warmth, swelling, red streaks, or fever within 24–48 hours requires emergency care
When to Go to the ER

Signs That Require Emergency Care — Do Not Wait

Go to the emergency room immediately if you see any of the following:

  • Red streaks extending from the wound (indicates spreading infection)
  • Significant swelling, warmth, or increasing pain at the wound site after 24 hours
  • Pus or discharge from the wound
  • Fever above 101°F (38.3°C)
  • Jaw stiffness or difficulty opening the mouth (tetanus)
  • Muscle spasms anywhere in the body (tetanus)
  • Wound that will not stop bleeding after 10 minutes of direct pressure
  • Deep wounds that may need sutures — especially over joints
  • Any wound exposure to floodwater in someone who is immunocompromised, diabetic, or has liver disease
Infections from Floodwater

Floodwater-Specific Infections — What's Actually in There

  • Vibrio vulnificus — Naturally present in warm coastal waters. Enters through skin wounds. Rapidly progressive wound infection with 25–30% fatality rate in bloodstream infections. Cover all wounds before any floodwater contact.
  • Leptospirosis — Bacterial infection from water contaminated with animal urine (rodents displaced by flooding). Enters through skin, especially cuts and mucous membranes. Causes flu-like illness; can progress to kidney failure, liver failure, and meningitis.
  • Pseudomonas & Aeromonas — Bacteria common in floodwater that cause wound infections, particularly in puncture wounds. Resistant to many common antibiotics. Require specific antibiotic treatment.
  • MRSA — Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Concentration in floodwater increases in densely populated areas. Can colonize skin wounds and cause difficult-to-treat infections.

The protective rule: Waterproof gloves and boots for all cleanup work. Cover every wound with waterproof dressing before beginning. Wash hands and exposed skin with soap and water immediately after any floodwater contact. Change out of clothing that has been in contact with floodwater before eating or touching your face.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

I got a cut during cleanup but it seems minor. Do I really need to see a doctor?

If the cut occurred in a debris field or involved contact with floodwater, rust, or soil, yes — at minimum to assess your tetanus vaccination status. A wound that seems minor can become life-threatening within 48-72 hours if contaminated with Vibrio, Clostridium, or other pathogens concentrated in post-hurricane environments.

How can I protect myself from puncture wounds during cleanup?

Wear puncture-resistant work boots — not sneakers or sandals. Never walk through debris in bare feet. Use a rake or long-handled tool to move debris rather than picking it up by hand. Wear heavy work gloves. Inspect the ground before each step in heavily debris-covered areas.

What should I include in a cleanup first aid kit?

Sterile saline irrigation solution or clean bottled water for wound flushing, 20mL syringes for puncture wound irrigation, sterile gauze pads, waterproof adhesive bandages in multiple sizes, antibiotic ointment, waterproof medical tape, nitrile gloves, a thermometer, and written instructions for when to seek emergency care. Know the location of the nearest operating emergency room before you begin cleanup work.

City guide

Louisiana coastal hurricane shutter guides

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AbbevilleGulf
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💡 Confirm your local wind rating before ordering

Louisiana coastal areas require storm protection rated for local design wind speeds. Verify the rating for your city or county before you buy.

Contractor tips

How to hire a hurricane shutter contractor in Louisiana

Louisiana requires a state contractor license for most work. These steps protect you, especially after a storm.

⚠️ Post-storm contractor flood

After every named storm, out-of-state crews arrive in Louisiana. The state requires a contractor license — verify with the LSLBC before signing anything.

🎒 When You Have to Leave — Go Bag Guides

Shutters protect your home. Your go bag protects your family. We've built the most complete go bag guides online — for every family member and pet, around the 5–7 day Gulf Coast reality.

☣️ Public Health Warning — After Any Hurricane

Waste bags at the curb spread E. coli, Leptospirosis, and Norovirus across entire neighborhoods through rainwater runoff, animal vectors, and children near debris piles. Double-bag all waste. Label it BIOHAZARD. Keep all children and pets away from every curb pile on your street — not just your own.

Full disease prevention guide — all 13 states →
FAQ

Questions Louisiana homeowners ask most

The questions we hear most from Louisiana coastal homeowners.

How much do hurricane shutters cost in Louisiana in 2026?
Louisiana shutter costs run $15–$100 per square foot by type. Storm panels are most affordable; impact windows and roll-downs are highest.
Does Louisiana have a building code for storm protection?
Yes. The statewide Louisiana State Uniform Construction Code (LSUCC) sets elevated wind and flood requirements across coastal parishes. Confirm products meet your parish's wind rating.
What is the hurricane history of Louisiana?
Katrina (2005) caused catastrophic levee failure in New Orleans. Ida (2021) and Laura (2020) were Category 4 landfalls, and Betsy and Audrey devastated earlier generations.
How long does shutter installation take in Louisiana?
From first call to finished install is typically 4–10 weeks. Plan ahead before hurricane season, since demand spikes after every Gulf threat.
Louisiana-specific rules

Louisiana coastal codes, building rules, and insurance — what homeowners must know

Louisiana has about 397 miles of intricate Gulf coastline. Construction follows the statewide LSUCC with elevated design wind speeds and flood elevation rules across coastal parishes.

Louisiana Citizens Property Insurance backs homes that cannot get standard coverage. The Strengthen Louisiana Homes program funds FORTIFIED upgrades, and documented protection can support lower wind premiums.

Key Coastal Counties

Orleans (New Orleans), Jefferson, Plaquemines, St. Bernard, Lafourche, Terrebonne, St. Tammany, Calcasieu (Lake Charles), Cameron, St. Charles

Code & Product Approval

Louisiana builds to the statewide LSUCC, based on the International Residential and Building Codes, with elevated wind and flood requirements across the coastal parishes.

Contractor Licensing

Verify any contractor with the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors (LSLBC). Louisiana requires a state license for most residential and commercial work.

Storm history

Louisiana's hurricane history — Katrina changed everything

Hurricane Katrina (2005) overwhelmed New Orleans' levees and flooded most of the city, becoming one of the costliest and deadliest disasters in US history. It reshaped flood and wind standards across Louisiana.

Hurricane Ida (2021, Cat 4) and Laura (2020, Cat 4) hammered the coast with extreme wind. From Cameron to St. Bernard, no part of the Louisiana coast is safe.

⚠️ Major Louisiana hurricanes

Katrina (2005, ~$125B, levee failure), Ida (2021, Cat 4, ~$75B), Laura (2020, Cat 4, Lake Charles), Rita (2005), Betsy (1965), Audrey (1957)

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General Information Disclaimer: Content on this page is provided for general educational purposes only and is not a substitute for advice from licensed professionals or official emergency management authorities. In any emergency, follow directives from your local emergency management officials and the NOAA National Hurricane Center. Statistical figures reflect published research and industry data; individual results vary. HurricaneShutterCalc.com and Franklyns Bay LLC assume no liability for decisions made based on information on this site. Full disclaimer →