• Burns · Sep 1997

    Clinical Trial

    Long-term psychosocial sequelae of paediatric burns.

    • R E Zeitlin.
    • Department of Surgery, Tampere University Hospital, Finland.
    • Burns. 1997 Sep 1; 23 (6): 467-72.

    AbstractNinety-one patients burn-injured in their childhood were assessed by mailed interview and clinical re-examination in 1994. On average, the patients had sustained injuries to 11.9 per cent (SD = 8.8) of their TBSA (maximum 50 per cent), the injuries were mainly scalds (90.1 per cent). Nineteen patients (20.9 per cent) remembered the event and 23 (25.3 per cent) remembered their hospitalisation. The hospitalisation vignettes were significantly associated with painful memories among children older than 3 yr (Fisher's exact test P = 0.04). Seventeen patients (18.7 per cent) had recollections of pain during hospitalisation. They had been confined for an average of 30.9 days. Twenty-one patients (23.1 per cent) had a fear of hot water and fire, and 39 (42.9 per cent) were cautious. The median age at the time of admission was 1.7 yr. The re-examined patients had good school marks and their rate of educational qualifications did not differ from the Finnish national average. No less than one fifth (20.8 per cent, N = 11) had some difficulties with contact with the opposite gender in their adolescence but only one had difficulties later. Fifty-five patients (mostly female, chi 2 = 13.06, DF = 2, P < 0.01) expressed annoyance at their scars, but no more than one third (N = 17) kept them covered continuously. Only five (5.5 per cent) with visible scars had no memories or special psychosocial sequelae. Almost everyone burn-injured in childhood will have some memories of burn care as an adult. However, the negative psychosocial sequale are modest after the typical paediatric burns, scalds, in early childhood.

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