Abstract

Burns are a major cause of injury worldwide. We investigated the epidemiology and outcomes of burn patients in a major burn center in southwest China between 2011 and 2015 to provide guidance for burn prevention. Of the 6,325 included burn patients, 66.8% were male and 34.7% were 0 ~ 6 years old. The incidence of burns peaked in autumn. Scald was the most common cause of burns, which was predominant in patients aged 0 ~ 6 years. The mean total body surface area (TBSA) of burns was 13.4%, and patients with burns ≤10% TBSA comprised 64.1% of all cases. Patients with full-thickness burns accounted for 40.1% of all patients and 81.0% of operated patients; these burns were primarily caused by flame (34.8%), scald (21.0%), and electricity (20.4%). Fifty-six deaths occurred (mortality 0.9%), and risk factors included full-thickness burns, larger TBSA and older age. The median length of stay was 17 days, and major risk factors included more operations, better outcomes and larger TBSA. Our data showed that closer attention should be paid to children under 6 years old, males, incidents in autumn and scald burns to prevent burn injuries. Furthermore, individualized burn prevention and treatment measures based on related risk factors should be adopted.

Highlights

  • Study was to describe the epidemiology and outcomes of burn patients who were admitted to the burn center of the Southwest Hospital in southwest China between January 2011 and December 2015

  • From January 2011 to December 2015, 6325 burn patients were included in this study

  • Age, total body surface area (TBSA), full-thickness burns, inhalation injury, number of operations, outcomes, and etiology were included in the regression model without obvious multicollinearity (Table S2)

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Summary

Introduction

Study was to describe the epidemiology and outcomes of burn patients who were admitted to the burn center of the Southwest Hospital in southwest China between January 2011 and December 2015. Age, TBSA, full-thickness burns, inhalation injury, number of operations, outcomes, and etiology (dummy variables compared with scald burns) were included in the regression model without obvious multicollinearity (Table S2).

Results
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