Contact our office:

(503) 765-7615
logistics@crisis-medicine.com

Login
Crisis Medicine
  • Training
    • TCCC and TECC Concepts
    • Training for Law Enforcement
    • Training for Fire & EMS
    • Training for Private Citizens
    • Training for EDC
    • Training For Faith Communities
    • Training For Teachers
  • Courses
    • ONLINE TCCC & TECC Courses
    • In-Person Training Calendar
    • Preview Course
    • Course Overview By Skills
    • Student Reviews
  • Company
    • About Crisis Medicine
    • Agency Pricing
    • Contact
    • CM in the Media
    • Disclosures – None
    • Lessons Learned in Blood
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Learn
    • New
    • Quick Tips
    • MARCH
      • (S) Security & Awareness
      • (M) Massive Hemorrhage
      • (A) Airway
      • (R) Respiration
      • (C) Circulation
      • (H) Hypothermia Prevention
    • Everything Else
    • Equipment
    • Improvised
    • K9 TECC/TCCC
    • Air Travel Emergencies
    • Tactical CBRN
      • Tactical-CBRN Journal Watch
    • Planning Your IFAK
  • Store

More

Two hedgehogs with injuries, one with a tiny cast on its left arm, the other with a 'cone of shame' for unknown injuries

Always Learning: Basic Wild Hedgehog First Aid

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories More

🕖 Reading Time, 5 minutes

As a professional instructor, it is important to keep learning and improving your knowledge base. As an SF soldier, having some familiarity with any topic is beneficial because you never know what will come in handy in an Unconventional Warfare setting. Based on this life experience, when Facebook advertised an online class on Hedgehog First Aid, it seemed obvious I had to take it.

My prior experience with tiny mammals is pretty limited, though I did once perform a surgical airway and place bilateral chest tubes in a dead rat before dissecting it in biology class. I occasionally saw hedgehogs along trails I ran while in medical school in New York. I realize now from Emma See Less’s class that hedgehogs are nocturnal and “if you see them during the day, they are not ok.”

Apparently, the biggest immediate life threats to injured hedgehogs are hypothermia and dehydration. In keeping with TCCC / TECC guidelines, hypothermia management is crucial. Hot packs or heating pads are recommended, but much like a NAR HPMK, don’t place the heating source directly on the casualty’s skin or you can burn them.

Contain an injured hedgehog in a box or small pet carrier. Placing a white fleece blanket between the heat source and the hedgehog helps evaluate them for injury. Blood is obviously very visible on white as is their stool, which if green indicates parasitic infection. Fleece is used because traditional towels can fray and loose threads can strangle hedgehog babies. As always, the first rule in medicine is don’t make things worse.

If severely dehydrated, they may require subcutaneous IV fluid, but many can be orally rehydrated using Critical Care Formula, a glucose-protein blend added to water. Giving solid food to a dehydrated hedgehog can cause organ failure.

Another big problem for hedgehogs once injured, is fly larva. Flies will deposit their eggs on hedgehogs, including the mouth of babies. Once you warm up the “hedgie” (Emma is British), the fly larva hatch into maggots. So, part of hypothermia management is fly larva removal. Certain insecticides can be used, but manual removal with hemostats seems best.

When feeling threatened, hedgehogs roll into a tight ball, so all their quills to point out. Their quills don’t detach like porcupines, but handling them with gloves is recommended both for hygiene and safety. You can “uncurl” them for physical examination by “rocking them back and forth” from one hand to another. Doing this makes them stick their feet out for stability.

Ultimately, an injured or sick hedgehog will need rehabilitation at a center with experience caring for them. Many can be successfully reintroduced back into the wild.

As a general matter, we know online education can be pretty hit-or-miss on the quality. In a 1.5 hour class, Emma provided a comprehensive introduction to hedgehog first aid, with clear instructions for directly actionable skills. You can find her on at Little Silver Hedgehog.

If you don’t have hedgehogs in your area, but want to spend some time getting Tactical Casualty Care training for humans instead,  you can always head over to our website, crisis-medicine.com for professionally filmed & edited, tactically-relevant and science-based casualty care courses. 

Preview CourseNot sure? Try a preview TRAIN NOWOnline Tactical Casualty Care Classes

Photo Credits:

Injured Hedgehogs at Britian’s Tiggywinles, National Geographic

Hedgehog Facebook Class and Hedgehog in Spring Garden, Little Silver Hedgehog

Mike Shertz MD/18D

Dr. Mike Shertz is the Owner and Lead Instructor at Crisis Medicine. Dr. Shertz is a dual-boarded Emergency Medicine and EMS physician, having spent over 30 years gaining the experience and insight to create and provide his comprehensive, science-informed, training to better prepare everyday citizens, law enforcement, EMS, and the military to manage casualties and wounded in high-risk environments. Drawing on his prior experience as an Army Special Forces medic (18D), two decades as an armed, embedded tactical medic on a regional SWAT team, and as a Fire Service and EMS medical director.

Using a combination of current and historical events, Dr. Shertz’s lectures include relevant, illustrative photos, as well as hands-on demonstrations to demystify the how, why, when to use each emergency medical procedure you need to become a Force Multiplier for Good.

Previous post

Deputy receives Lifesaver Award one month after online training and credits Crisis Medicine

Next post

Powerful TECC/TCCC uses for a fingertip pulse oximeter

You may also like

A photo of a small, lightweight O2 producing smoke hood
Smoke Hoods vs. Reality: Why Filtering Isn’t Enough in Life-Threatening Fires
Two first aid cards from the Willis Cigarette Co showing proper use of a cravat & a stick wrap tourniquet
Old and Still Relevant: 1913 First Aid Cards
Dr. Shertz in his alter ego as Camp counselor "Omega" stands ruggedly in the woods training Girl Scouts to be prepared for emergencies
Be Prepared: Training your kids for emergencies

Featured Courses

Tactical Casualty Care – ONLINE

Tactical Casualty Care – ONLINE

$150.00
Advanced TC2 – ONLINE

Advanced TC2 – ONLINE

$395.00
Complete TC2  -ONLINE

Complete TC2 -ONLINE

$595.00
Improvised TECC/TCCC

Improvised TECC/TCCC

$125.00
K9 Tactical Casualty Care for Humans  – ONLINE

K9 Tactical Casualty Care for Humans – ONLINE

$75.00
Tactical CBRN Casualty Care – ONLINE

Tactical CBRN Casualty Care – ONLINE

$225.00
First Receivers – No Notice MCI Events – ONLINE

First Receivers – No Notice MCI Events – ONLINE

$175.00
Air Travel Emergencies – ONLINE

Air Travel Emergencies – ONLINE

$175.00
Sign up for updates
Our privacy policy can be found at https://www.crisis-medicine.com/privacy-policy/
Loading
Learn MoreTactical Casualty Care course

Search

The short version of the Crisis Medicine logo showing a C and M with an arrow in between the two

DUNS: 093140133

CAGE: 8U3A3

Company

  • About Us
  • Disclosures – None
  • Contributors
  • Contact

Courses

  • Online
  • In-Person
  • Content Warning
  • FAQs

Fine Print

  • Terms
  • Privacy Policy
  • Scope of Practice
  • FAQs

Resources

  • N. Amer. Rescue
  • TacMed Solutions
  • Chinook Medical
  • Skedco
  • Wound Cube

©2025 Crisis Medicine, all rights reserved.

  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Sitemap

Login with your site account

Lost your password?