Me, too. It is difficult to find help for ducks in general, never mind in an emergency. And depending on who you talk to, they are either farm animals (just kill it and get another one) or exotics (that will be $$$$$ just for an exam, please)
I originally posted on the emergencies forum/board for help, but got no reply. I guess that one is for chicken emergencies only. Silly me!
I had to learn by trial and error and lots of advice from some of my Facebook friends (one switched from pre-veterinary studies to become a CNA and is now a pharmacy student, and another who has a husband who is a nurse - I really picked their brains) and what I could find on the different discussions on the forums here, the internet in general and common sense.
The only thing I did not do that maybe I should have is I did not clip off enough feathers to find wounds. Looking back, I should have just cut them all off and put baby t-shirts on her. Now that the scabs are sloughing off, I am finding woulds I did not treat. Fortunately, the treatment she did get seems to have been sufficient (I rarely have money for a vet visit, so I do 98% of everything myself.)
Now that Lucy is nearly recovered, I was waffling between being a sneaky law breaker or being an out in the open law breaker; i.e. do I keep her in the house or put her in the back yard in a predator proof pen. Since the neighbors here stupidly feed raccoons ("But they are hungry! and they are cute!") and red-tail hawks ("But they are soooo cool!") I opted for keeping her in the house and treating her like any other house pet - including diapering (yes, diapering- for those who are incredulous at this, it does cut down on the amount of cleaning, and it does not hurt the bird or hamper it in any way. Bird diapers are built differently than people baby diapers or dog diapers. Google duck diapers or chicken diapers)
Currently, she lives in a large wire dog crate in my livingroom where she is in the thick of things without getting hurt. I had to steal the crate from one of our dogs (actually my daughter's dog).
Eventually, I got tired of washing 6 loads of towels every week (in addition to the people laundry & towels), so I got some of those piddle pads they put under incontinent people and it helps cut down the work immensely. True, it isn't very green, but until she is ready to go back on shavings, she gets the piddle pads.
Meanwhile, I am altering a different crate for Lucy to make cleaning easier for me.
Then the little dog can have her crate back (she is always trying to get the duck to go out so she can go in)
(edited for spelling)