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Journal Article

Citation

Samuel JC, Campbell EL, Mjuweni S, Muyco AP, Cairns BA, Charles AG. J. Int. Med. Res. 2011; 39(3): 873-879.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery, Kamuzu Central Hospital, Lilongwe, Malawi; Department of Surgery, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Field House Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

21819720

PMCID

PMC3290411

Abstract

This report describes the epidemiology of burn injuries and quantifies the appropriateness of use of available interventions at Kamuzu Central Hospital, Malawi, between July 2008 and June 2009 (370 burn patients). Burns accounted for 4.4% of all injuries and 25.9% of all burns presenting to the hospital were admitted. Most patients (67.6%) were < 15 years old and 56.2% were male. The most frequent cause was scalding (51.4%). Burns occurred most frequently in the cool, dry season and in the evening. The mean burn surface area (second/third degree) was 14.1% and most burns (74%) presented within 8 h. The commonest procedure was debridement and/or amputation. The mean hospital stay was 21.1 days, in-hospital mortality was 27% and wound infection rate was 31%. Available interventions (intravenous fluids, nutrition therapy, physiotherapy) were misapplied in 59% of cases. It is concluded that primary prevention should address paediatric and scald burns, and secondary prevention should train providers to use available interventions appropriately.


Language: en

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