Bainbridge
New Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- May-June 2023
September-October 2024
Do Spanish Pharmacies along the Camino Frances carry compeed type blister patches?
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Do Spanish Pharmacies along the Camino Frances carry compeed type blister patches?
Hooray! Now, all you smarties, how do you get them off your nice merino/smartwool sox ?Compeed is "big business" all along the Camino. All pharmacies will have it in variety.
Have a look at Rebecca Rushton's advice at https://www.blister-prevention.com/how-to-use-a-hydrocolloid-dressing/. Basically she suggests a technique for not getting it on in the first place.Hooray! Now, all you smarties, how do you get them off your nice merino/smartwool sox ?
Her advice is mostly good - but I totally disagree with her on one point -My observation is that Compeed and other hydrocolloid blister dressings are the most widely mis-used medical products on the camino. I suggest you have a look at Rebecca Rushton's advice here https://www.blister-prevention.com/how-to-use-a-hydrocolloid-dressing/ if you haven't already. It will explain when and how to use these dressings, and offers some useful tips on how to keep the dressing attached to you and not to your sock.
Yes but twice the price they are in UK....same for paracetamol and nurofen in oharmacied.....hiweverNot only are Compeed available in pharmacies but you will find vending machines that carry them on the Camino Frances.
More expensive....than in UKNot only are Compeed available in pharmacies but you will find vending machines that carry them on the Camino Frances.
For this method you have to know that the hot-spot is "healed" with compeed....
Compeed works best when you have a hot-spot BEFORE it blisters.
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Have a look at Rebecca Rushton's advice at https://www.blister-prevention.com/how-to-use-a-hydrocolloid-dressing/. Basically she suggests a technique for not getting it on in the first place.
I already addressed these issues in my post - you don't just peel it off. You wait until it is coming off on it's own. And you use it BEFORE you blister. You don't put it on a blister. You put it on a tender/reddened area BEFORE any blister can form. A "hot spot" is NOT a blister. And I already said - you need to do all the other preventative care like right shoes/socks to prevent a hot spot from forming in the first place.For this method you have to know that the hot-spot is "healed" with compeed.
If the hot-spot is not healed... compeed can make the problem worse, because you can't just pull the compeed off the skin if it doesn't work. (e. g. if the shoes are too small and this causes the hot-spot and cannot be healed by compeed -> blister can grow and burst under the compeed).
Because of this:
If you do not already know that compeed works for you for blister prevention... do not use it for blister prevention, but...
I had a few blisters on my first camino. I used Compeed and have sworn I will never use them again. Had a couple of blisters on my second. I drained them immediately and often. bandaged them with gauze and and Neosporin. I took it easy for a couple of days. Walked in my Toms sandals over half the time on those days. I stopped often and if there was even a small bubble I drained it and put on a fresh bandage and was fine in a couple of days. Haven't had a blister since.My observation is that Compeed and other hydrocolloid blister dressings are the most widely mis-used medical products on the camino. I suggest you have a look at Rebecca Rushton's advice here https://www.blister-prevention.com/how-to-use-a-hydrocolloid-dressing/ if you haven't already. It will explain when and how to use these dressings, and offers some useful tips on how to keep the dressing attached to you and not to your sock.
They are not supposed to be used on already formed blisters. They can be used before a blister forms - or after a blister becomes "deroofed". But on blisters they do make things worse - especially if a blister can't drain naturally or the compeed is removed too quickly and it tears the roof of a blister.I had a few blisters on my first camino. I used Compeed and have sworn I will never use them again. Had a couple of blisters on my second. I drained them immediately and often. bandaged them with gauze and and Neosporin. I took it easy for a couple of days. Walked in my Toms sandals over half the time on those days. I stopped often and if there was even a small bubble I drained it and put on a fresh bandage and was fine in a couple of days. Haven't had a blister since.
Compeed not for me. I think it made my blisters worse. Just my opinion and my own personal experience of course.
Yeah - for blister prevention on hot spots - use what works. If bandaids/tape work for you - that is fine too. Compeed works best for me. Although - I tend to buy a generic brand.For a hotspot I think that any kind of barrier will work, including a simple bandaid or tape. No need to use an expensive Compeed.
I use Omnifix or Hypafix tapes on my blister prone areas.
Where were you when I needed you 11 years ago???? hahah I learned that the hard way. I did not take the compeed off myself. But it was sticking to my socks and made a mess of things. My method that I described, I used on my second camino and it worked fine for me. Since then I have not had one blister. Lots of caminos make you wiser about your feet and luck never hurts either!They are not supposed to be used on already formed blisters. They can be used before a blister forms - or after a blister becomes "deroofed". But on blisters they do make things worse - especially if a blister can't drain naturally or the compeed is removed too quickly and it tears the roof of a blister.
Turn your socks inside out. Pick off what you can. Curse the glue. Scrub soap into the glue. Curse again. Give up and hang to dry. Days later, come across a location with a washing machine. Wash them in a washing machine. Tada! Glue free!Hooray! Now, all you smarties, how do you get them off your nice merino/smartwool sox ?
Yes - they are great for deroofed blisters and that falls into their primary purpose. I never disagreed with that part of the original linked advice.When you think of how hydrocolloid bandages like Compeed work it doesn't make sense to use them on unbroken skin.
What Is in Hydrocolloid Bandages, and How Are They Used?
Hydrocolloid bandages are used to treat open, superficial wounds and open pimples. They create and support wound healing.www.healthline.com
Thank you - That makes sense and fits well with my experience, explaining some of the conflicting advice/opinions we see.It is the "in between a hot spot and complete deroofing" that it is most harmful... but before and after it can work great when properly used.
Or moleskin if you want a little bit of cushioning.Using Compeed for hot spots or blister-prone areas can get expensive. A good alternative would be the type of stretchy lightly-adhesive gauze "dressing retention tape" such as Omnifix.
I really like moleskin for hot spots and is much less expensive than compeed. In a pinch I've used duct tape as I bring a bit wrapped around a plastic pen for emergencies, but it can leave a bit of residue on your sock, so Omnifax sounds better.Or moleskin if you want a little bit of cushioning.
In fact you can make a "donut " with moleskin with the hole in the middle larger than the hotspot. Then cover the entire area with Omnifix over the moleskin.
I am guilty of putting them occasional blisters too - but only the small but thicker ones that I am not worried about popping or ripping (they are more like calloused blisters).I have used them on heel blisters on the Camino. They absorb the fluid that collects from the draining blister and usually come off on their own in a day or two in the shower.
Yeah these are things I used to do before I knew about Compeed. I like Compeed better now though. (for me). One of the reasons I like it best is because the place where I am most likely to blister is on a boney/bunion - and the cushioning of the compeed is perfect over boney spots.When back country hiking before my first Camino I would use a Telfa pad that doesn't stick to the draining blister, then a thin layer of gauze and then cover the whole thing with some duct or 100 mile an hour tape (which holds it more securely than medical tape and reduces rubbing). I had not seen Compeed brand for blisters in the US until only a few years ago.
Good suggestion! I haven't used Omnifix - but I have seen it before.Thank you - That makes sense and fits well with my experience, explaining some of the conflicting advice/opinions we see.
Using Compeed for hot spots or blister-prone areas can get expensive. A good alternative would be the type of stretchy lightly-adhesive gauze "dressing retention tape" such as Omnifix.
I haven't had good luck with moleskin sticking - but maybe with Omnifix over it might work better for me.Or moleskin if you want a little bit of cushioning.
In fact you can make a "donut " with moleskin with the hole in the middle larger than the hotspot. Then cover the entire area with Omnifix over the moleskin.
I didn't have hikers wool with me last year - I did grab a little wool off one of the barbed wire fences though when I didn't have any Compeed.I am fortunate that I don't get blisters easily. However I do carry Hikers Wool which is wonderful with hot spots. I've given away far more than I've used. It's very light to carry. I think the key is to be aware of your feet and treat them straight away if you feel anything is out of sorts.
I don't have the technical understanding to debate this point. I can only note that applying a hydrocolloid dressing to intact skin seems completely counter-intuitive because there is no wound to dress. All the explanations you have provided indicate to me that all one might be doing is padding the hot-spot, and using a hydrocolloid dressing is a very expensive, and quite unnecessary way of doing that. More, your advice is reliant on the individual being sufficiently disciplined to maintain the dressing in place until it detaches itself. Even when hydrocolloid dressings are used properly, ie on a de-roofed blister to treat an open wound, I regularly see people who want to remove the dressing and replace it with a new dressing. Exactly the opposite of the recommended dressing procedure.Compeed works best when you have a hot-spot BEFORE it blisters.
I will never again use comped. It simply will not come off without taking some skin with it.Have a look at Rebecca Rushton's advice at https://www.blister-prevention.com/how-to-use-a-hydrocolloid-dressing/. Basically she suggests a technique for not getting it on in the first place.
I agree. I would only use them, if at all, on an early red spot type blister. On my first camino, there was a lady who used them on both of her feet. The only way she could get them off was to tear off the skin. She had to seek medical care and could not walk for 2 weeks!!!My observation is that Compeed and other hydrocolloid blister dressings are the most widely mis-used medical products on the camino. I suggest you have a look at Rebecca Rushton's advice here https://www.blister-prevention.com/how-to-use-a-hydrocolloid-dressing/ if you haven't already. It will explain when and how to use these dressings, and offers some useful tips on how to keep the dressing attached to you and not to your sock.
Yep - this is what people don't seem to understand. It isn't supposed to be peeled off. It is supposed to come off on it's own. I have applied countless hydrocolloid dressing to patients too... they work great when used properly.You are supposed to wait until it falls off, not take it off. When it absorbs fluid from the wound, it will come off on its own. The compeed website has a lot of information about its correct use. As I said earlier, in nursing we use this kind of dressing (much larger though) for various other kinds of pressure sores.
Doug - do what you want to do. That is fine. I don't care what you do. I am sure you know what works for you. Stick to it.More, your advice is reliant on the individual being sufficiently disciplined to maintain the dressing in place until it detaches itself. Even when hydrocolloid dressings are used properly, ie on a de-roofed blister to treat an open wound, I regularly see people who want to remove the dressing and replace it with a new dressing. Exactly the opposite of the recommended dressing procedure.
Thank you for that information that article was a real eye opener. If I hadn’t read that and got a blister on my upcoming first Camino I would have done completely the wrong things.My observation is that Compeed and other hydrocolloid blister dressings are the most widely mis-used medical products on the camino. I suggest you have a look at Rebecca Rushton's advice here https://www.blister-prevention.com/how-to-use-a-hydrocolloid-dressing/ if you haven't already. It will explain when and how to use these dressings, and offers some useful tips on how to keep the dressing attached to you and not to your sock.