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Journal Article

Citation

Akkerman M, Mouton LJ, Dijkstra F, Niemeijer AS, van Brussel M, van der Woude LHV, Disseldorp LM, Nieuwenhuis MK. Burns 2017; 43(8): 1792-1801.

Affiliation

Association of Dutch Burn Centres, Burn Centre Martini Hospital, Groningen, The Netherlands; University of Groningen, University Medical Centre Groningen, Centre for Human Movement Sciences, Groningen, The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.burns.2017.05.007

PMID

28610795

Abstract

PURPOSE: Fatigue is a common consequence of numerous pediatric health conditions. In adult burn survivors, fatigue was found to be a major problem. The current cross-sectional study is aimed at determining the levels of perceived fatigue in pediatric burn survivors.

METHODS: Perceived fatigue was assessed in 23 children and adolescents (15 boys and 8 girls, aged 6-18 years, with burns covering 10-46% of the total body surface area, 1-5 years post burn) using both child self- and parent proxy reports of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory Multidimensional Fatigue Scale. Outcomes were compared with reference values of non-burned peers.

RESULTS: At group level, pediatric burn survivors did not report significantly more symptoms of fatigue than their non-burned peers. Individual assessments showed, however, that four children experienced substantial symptoms of fatigue according to the child self-reports, compared to ten children according to the parent proxy reports. Furthermore, parents reported significantly more symptoms of fatigue than the children themselves. Age, gender, extent of burn, length of hospital stay, and number of surgeries could not predict the level of perceived fatigue post-burn.

CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that fatigue is prevalent in at least part of the pediatric burn population after 1-5 years. However, the fact that parents reported significantly more symptoms of fatigue then the children themselves, hampers evident conclusions. It is essential for clinicians and therapists to consider both perspectives when evaluating pediatric fatigue after burn and to determine who needs special attention, the pediatric burn patient or its parent.

Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd and ISBI. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Burns; Fatigue; Patient-reported outcomes; Rehabilitation

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