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Journal Article

Citation

Peck MD, Mantelle L, Ward CG. J. Burn Care Rehabil. 1996; 17(1): 39-44.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery and Epidemiology & Public Health, University of Miami School of Medicine, FL 33101, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1996, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8808358

Abstract

Data were collected prospectively from 196 patients admitted to our regional burn center during a 10-month period. Fifteen patients died during hospitalization, for a mortality rate of 7.7%. The mean hospital stay of the 181 patients who survived was 13.9 days (+/- 13.7 SD), ranging from 2 to 89 days. The mean burn size was 9.2% (+/- 11% SD), ranging from 0.5% to 60% total body surface area. One hundred ten patients received at least 1 day of antibiotic treatment, and 22 patients required ventilatory support during hospitalization. Hospital stay was longer for those requiring antibiotics (18.6 days vs 7 days) or ventilatory support (34.4 days vs 11.2 days). When these and other variables were entered into a linear regression model, the most powerful predictors of hospital stay were burn size and duration of antibiotic use (p = 0.0001), followed next by the presence of other traumatic injuries (p = 0.047).


Language: en

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