This question is far too general. Insect bites and animal bites are different.
Animal and insect bites can transmit diseases from the host to another animal or human, including bacterial and viral diseases, such as malaria, rabies, and various fevers.
Respiratory conditions, asthma, gastrointestinal disorders, fatigue, bruises, insect bites, sprains.
Rabies, Lyme disease. You know, all that fun stuff. Depends on which animal too.
do you put a plaster on bites
Use insect repellent.
Insect repellant can help prevent insect bites and stings. Those with concentrated amounts of DEET stay effective longer.
It depends on the insect. Most insects are quite innocuous.
The goal of treatment is to stop bleeding, prevent infection, and alleviate envenomation, or exposure to poison.
Native Americans used alder bark to treat insect bites, poison oak, and other skin irritations.
Arthritis, rheumatism, animal bites, colic, constipation, hemorrhoids, hangover, fever, wound healing.
calamine lotion and is used as an anti-itching agent to treat mild pruritic conditions such as sunburn, eczema, rashes, poison ivy, chickenpox, and insect bites and stings.
A bite is an injury caused by an animal, such as a mammal or insect, that breaks the skin. A sting is a puncture wound made by insects or marine animals.