Author:
Krstic Bojana,Krstic Milos,Selakovic Dragica,Jovicic Nemanja,Rosic Gvozden
Abstract
In this editorial, we discuss the status of a therapeutic approach to emotional reactions accompanying thermal skin injuries. Burns are considered a major health problem, as well as an economic and social problem, with potentially devastating and life-changing consequences. They affect a wide range of patients with different damage mechanisms, varied depths, and localizations of the burns. The most common are thermal burns, with more than 11 million occurrences annually according to the World Health Organization data. Thermal skin injuries are among the most tragic and catastrophic injuries, almost unsurpassed in terms of severity, morbidity, and mortality, as well as functional, aesthetic, social, economic, and psychological consequences. Burn survivors face stress, anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, body deformity, social isolation, unemployment, financial burden, and family problems. The advances in acute burn care have allowed researchers and physicians to pay more attention to other effects of burns, focusing on psychological consequences in particular. Apart from the significant improvements in routine protocols, it seems useful to take care of psychological disturbances that occur simultaneously but may emerge as the most lasting outcome of those injuries. In that sense, various standards and additional approaches may be involved to achieve overall recovery.
Publisher
Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.
Reference19 articles.
1. Injury, Fatal and Nonfatal: Burns and Scalds
2. Infant burns: A single institution retrospective review
3. Walker NJ, King KC. Acute and Chronic Thermal Burn Evaluation and Management. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2023
4. Stokes MAR, Johnson WD. Burns in the Third World: an unmet need. Ann Burns Fire Disasters 2017; 30: 243-246
5. Burns in low- and middle-income countries: A review of available literature on descriptive epidemiology, risk factors, treatment, and prevention