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Journal Article

Citation

Yohannan SK, Ronda-Velez Y, Henriquez DA, Hunter H, Tufaro PA, Marren M, Sher M, Gorga DI, Yurt RW. Burns 2012; 38(8): 1151-1156.

Affiliation

NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, New York, NY 10065-4885, United States.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.burns.2012.07.009

PMID

22922009

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The perspectives of burn survivors offer a powerful tool in assessing the efficacy of burn therapy interventions and methods. Despite this potential wealth of data, comprehensive analysis of burn survivor feedback remains largely uninvestigated and underdocumented. The aim of this study was to evaluate specific burn therapy interventions based on the opinions of a sample of the burn community. METHODS: The survey was distributed to a convenience sample drawn from burn survivors attending the Phoenix Society's 21st Annual World Burn Congress in New York City, New York. Items of inquiry focused on therapeutic intervention and reintegration. The 164 surveys (a 44% response rate) returned included burn survivors from a variety of demographic segments and with burn injuries of disparate size, location, and severity. Interventions of interest included splinting and positioning, pressure garments, therapeutic exercise, group therapy, and nontraditional therapy. Respondents also rated the contribution of acute burn rehabilitation toward reintegration into familial, societal, and professional roles. RESULTS: The vast majority of respondents felt that the rehabilitative interventions they experienced positively affected their long-term physical and psychosocial outcomes. In the areas of improving movement and scarring and expediting reintegration and usefulness, the majority of applicable interventions generated "strongly agree" or "agree" as the most popular responses. CONCLUSIONS: These findings support the efficacy of many practices employed by burn rehabilitation specialists and offer a glimpse into the inherent benefits found in assessment of burn survivors' perspectives.


Language: en

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