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Journal Article

Citation

Duke JM, Boyd JH, Rea S, Randall SM, Wood FM. Bull. World Health Organ. 2015; 93(6): 400-406.

Affiliation

Burns Service of Western Australia, Royal Perth Hospital and Princess Margaret Hospital, Perth, Australia .

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, World Health Organization)

DOI

10.2471/BLT.14.149146

PMID

26240461

PMCID

PMC4450710

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:
To assess if burn injury in older adults is associated with changes in long-term all-cause mortality and to estimate the increased risk of death attributable to burn injury.
METHODS:
We conducted a population-based matched longitudinal study - based on administrative data from Western Australia's hospital morbidity data system and death register. A cohort of 6014 individuals who were aged at least 45 years when hospitalized for a first burn injury in 1980-2012 was identified. A non-injury comparison cohort, randomly selected from Western Australia's electoral roll (nā€‰=ā€‰25ā€‰759), was matched to the patients. We used Kaplan-Meier plots and Cox proportional hazards regression to analyse the data and generated mortality rate ratios and attributable risk percentages.
FINDINGS:
For those hospitalized with burns, 180 (3%) died in hospital and 2498 (42%) died after discharge. Individuals with burn injury had a 1.4-fold greater mortality rate than those with no injury (95% confidence interval, CI: 1.3-1.5). In this cohort, the long-term mortality attributable to burn injury was 29%. Mortality risk was increased by both severe and minor burns, with adjusted mortality rate ratios of 1.3 (95% CI: 1.1-1.9) and 2.1 (95% CI: 1.9-2.3), respectively.
CONCLUSION:
Burn injury is associated with increased long-term mortality. In our study population, sole reliance on data on in-hospital deaths would lead to an underestimate of the true mortality burden associated with burn injury.


Language: en

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