Assessment And Determinants Of Global Outcomes Among 445 Mass-Casualty Burn Survivors: A 2-Year Retrospective Cohort Study In Taiwan

Hsu Ma,Kwang-Yi Tung,Shu-Ling Tsai,David L Neil, Yun-Yi Ling, Hung-Tsang Yen, Kao-Li Lin, Yi-Ting Cheng,Shu-Chen Kao, Mei-Na Lin,Niann-Tzyy Dai,Cherng-Kang Perng,Tyng-Guey Wang,Hao-Chih Tai,Li-Ru Chen, Yung-Chang Tuan,Chi-Hung Lin

BURNS(2020)

引用 3|浏览17
暂无评分
摘要
Purpose: To study outcomes among survivors of the mass-casualty powder explosion on 27 June 2015, at Formosa Fun Coast Waterpark, New Taipei City, Taiwan.Methods: Using retrospective data on Taiwanese survivors, we analyzed prehospital management, burns assessment and prognosis, functional recovery, and medical costs, followed-up through 30 June 2017. We related outcomes to burn extent, categorized according to the percentages of total body surface area with second/third-degree burns (% TBSA) or autologous split-thickness skin grafts (%STSG), and an investigational scale: f{SASG} = (%TBSA + %STSG)/2, stratified by %STSG. Analyses included casualty dispersal, comparisons between %TBSA, %STSG and f{SASG}, and their relationships with length of hospitalization, times to rehabilitation and social/school re-entry, physical/mental disability, and medical costs. We also investigated how burn scars restricting joint mobility affected rehabilitation duration.Results: 445 hospitalized casualties (excluding 16 foreigners, 23 with 0% TBSA and 15 fatalities) aged 12-38 years, had mean TBSA of 41.1%. Hospitalization and functional recovery durations correlated with %TBSA, %STSG and f{SASG} - mean length of stay per % TBSA was 1.5 days; more numerous burn scar contractures prolonged rehabilitation. Females had worse burns than males, longer hospitalization and rehabilitation, and later school/social re-entry; at follow-up, 62.3% versus 37.7% had disabilities and 57.7% versus 42.3% suffered mental trauma (all p < 0.001). Disabilities affecting 225/227 people were skin-related; 34 were severely disabled but 193 had mild/moderate impairments. The prevalence of stress-related and mood disorders increased with burn extent. Treatment costs (mean USD-equivalents similar to$48,977/patient, similar to$1192/%TBSA) increased with burn severity; however, the highest %TBSA, %STSG and f{SASG} categories accounted for <10% of total costs, whereas TBSA 41-80% accounted for 73.2%.Conclusions: Besides %TBSA, skin-graft requirements and burn scar contractures are complementary determinants of medium/long-term outcomes. We recommend further elucidation of factors that influence burn survivors' recovery, long-term physical and mental well-being, and quality of life. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Burn injury assessment score/index, Length of stay (LOS), Prognosis, Long-term physical/mental health outcomes, Psychosocial rehabilitation, Treatment cost
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要