Cargando…

A Single Center Review of the Dangers of Recreational Fires in the Pediatric Population

The increasing trend of admissions due to recreational fires prompted a 5-year review. The retrospective chart review of pediatric burn injuries from campfires or bonfires treated at a single medical center’s burn unit. The study included children within the ages of 0 to 15 admitted or transferred f...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Perinjelil, Vinu, Haake, Robert Stephen, Ahmed, Afroze, Al-Daoud, Fadi, Maraqa, Tareq, Mercer, Leo, Wong, Kristoffer, Morris, Stephen, Scholten, Donald, Sachwani-Daswani, Gul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7940499/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33200770
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/iraa095
_version_ 1783661963569528832
author Perinjelil, Vinu
Haake, Robert Stephen
Ahmed, Afroze
Al-Daoud, Fadi
Maraqa, Tareq
Mercer, Leo
Wong, Kristoffer
Morris, Stephen
Scholten, Donald
Sachwani-Daswani, Gul
author_facet Perinjelil, Vinu
Haake, Robert Stephen
Ahmed, Afroze
Al-Daoud, Fadi
Maraqa, Tareq
Mercer, Leo
Wong, Kristoffer
Morris, Stephen
Scholten, Donald
Sachwani-Daswani, Gul
author_sort Perinjelil, Vinu
collection PubMed
description The increasing trend of admissions due to recreational fires prompted a 5-year review. The retrospective chart review of pediatric burn injuries from campfires or bonfires treated at a single medical center’s burn unit. The study included children within the ages of 0 to 15 admitted or transferred from January 2012 to December 2016 with first, second, and/or third degree burns by bonfires. These patients accrued burns due to active fires as well as postfire ember contact. Two hundred-eighty nine (289) were pediatric admissions out of which 66 (22.8%) were pediatric admissions associated with recreational fires. The mean annual admission for campfire or bonfire burns was 13 ± .98. The mean age was 4 ± 2.47 years. Gender distribution revealed 21 female and 45 male pediatric patients under the age of 15. From the available data, 8 (12%) of these burns occurred at home in the backyard and 16 (24%) at a public camp or park. Injury mechanisms were more commonly a result of direct contact with hot coals and embers (65%). Falls into open flame accounted for 23% (n = 15) of injuries, and flash flames accounted for 12% of injuries (n = 8). The presence of supervision was unknown in 56%; however, lack of supervision was a factor in 14% of our study population. By gaining a better understanding of the type of injury, mechanism of injury, and the demographic of recreational fire burn victims, policy, and awareness campaigns were instituted in an effort to reduce the incidence of recreational fire burns.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7940499
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-79404992021-03-12 A Single Center Review of the Dangers of Recreational Fires in the Pediatric Population Perinjelil, Vinu Haake, Robert Stephen Ahmed, Afroze Al-Daoud, Fadi Maraqa, Tareq Mercer, Leo Wong, Kristoffer Morris, Stephen Scholten, Donald Sachwani-Daswani, Gul J Burn Care Res Original Articles The increasing trend of admissions due to recreational fires prompted a 5-year review. The retrospective chart review of pediatric burn injuries from campfires or bonfires treated at a single medical center’s burn unit. The study included children within the ages of 0 to 15 admitted or transferred from January 2012 to December 2016 with first, second, and/or third degree burns by bonfires. These patients accrued burns due to active fires as well as postfire ember contact. Two hundred-eighty nine (289) were pediatric admissions out of which 66 (22.8%) were pediatric admissions associated with recreational fires. The mean annual admission for campfire or bonfire burns was 13 ± .98. The mean age was 4 ± 2.47 years. Gender distribution revealed 21 female and 45 male pediatric patients under the age of 15. From the available data, 8 (12%) of these burns occurred at home in the backyard and 16 (24%) at a public camp or park. Injury mechanisms were more commonly a result of direct contact with hot coals and embers (65%). Falls into open flame accounted for 23% (n = 15) of injuries, and flash flames accounted for 12% of injuries (n = 8). The presence of supervision was unknown in 56%; however, lack of supervision was a factor in 14% of our study population. By gaining a better understanding of the type of injury, mechanism of injury, and the demographic of recreational fire burn victims, policy, and awareness campaigns were instituted in an effort to reduce the incidence of recreational fire burns. Oxford University Press 2020-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7940499/ /pubmed/33200770 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/iraa095 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Burn Association. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Perinjelil, Vinu
Haake, Robert Stephen
Ahmed, Afroze
Al-Daoud, Fadi
Maraqa, Tareq
Mercer, Leo
Wong, Kristoffer
Morris, Stephen
Scholten, Donald
Sachwani-Daswani, Gul
A Single Center Review of the Dangers of Recreational Fires in the Pediatric Population
title A Single Center Review of the Dangers of Recreational Fires in the Pediatric Population
title_full A Single Center Review of the Dangers of Recreational Fires in the Pediatric Population
title_fullStr A Single Center Review of the Dangers of Recreational Fires in the Pediatric Population
title_full_unstemmed A Single Center Review of the Dangers of Recreational Fires in the Pediatric Population
title_short A Single Center Review of the Dangers of Recreational Fires in the Pediatric Population
title_sort single center review of the dangers of recreational fires in the pediatric population
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7940499/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33200770
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/iraa095
work_keys_str_mv AT perinjelilvinu asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT haakerobertstephen asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT ahmedafroze asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT aldaoudfadi asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT maraqatareq asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT mercerleo asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT wongkristoffer asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT morrisstephen asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT scholtendonald asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT sachwanidaswanigul asinglecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT perinjelilvinu singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT haakerobertstephen singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT ahmedafroze singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT aldaoudfadi singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT maraqatareq singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT mercerleo singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT wongkristoffer singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT morrisstephen singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT scholtendonald singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation
AT sachwanidaswanigul singlecenterreviewofthedangersofrecreationalfiresinthepediatricpopulation