Abstract

With advanced medical treatments more burns patients survive their injuries, requiring a better understanding of the quality-of-life outcomes experienced after the burn. The aims of the ABLE study cohort profile are to describe the baseline characteristics. The study included participants aged 18 years or over, admitted to a single state-wide burns centre in Queensland, Australia with a ‘major burn injury’. Baseline survey data were collected either in person or by telephone within 28 days of the injury and participants were followed up with in-person, or telephone interviews at 3-, 6- and 12-months post-burn. Injury and burns treatment information were collected from medical records or the hospital database and surveys collected demographic and psychosocial data. Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) data were collected using the 12-item Short Form Survey – version 1 (SF-12v1) and the Burn Specific Health Scale – Brief version (BSHS-B). Of the 274 participants recruited, 71.5 % (N = 196) remained enrolled in the study at 12 months post-burn. The median age for the cohort was 41.5 years (range 18 to 87 years) and the majority were male (72 %) as well as non-Indigenous Australians (76 %). The median Total Body Surface Area (TBSA) burned was 4.75 % (IQR=1.5–10.13) with a range of 0.1 % to 79.75 %. The largest percentage of participants sustained a flame burn (N = 129, 47.1 %) followed by scald (N = 56, 20.4 %) then contact burn (N = 54, 19.7 %). Fewer participants were injured by chemical (N = 14, 5.1 %), friction (N = 11, 4 %), and electrical burns (N = 6, 2.2 %). There were 37.9 % participants who reported having been diagnosed with a psychological condition prior to their burn injury. These findings provide an overview of baseline characteristics with a greater understanding of personal, environmental, burn injury and burn treatment factors in a state-wide burn centre.

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