A Regional Analysis of Potentially Preventable Injuries Sustained From Burning Garbage and Yard Waste

Author:

Hill David M1ORCID,Rath Abigail J2,Boam Tina3ORCID,Fletchall Sandra1,Sabbatini Sarah4,Geib Teresa1,Krebs Mamie1ORCID,Funk David4,Greer Catherine1,Mincey Megan1,Wayne Mary4,Dadireddy Kalyan5ORCID,Liu Xiangxia6,Velamuri Sai R6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy, Regional One Health , Memphis, Tennessee , USA

2. College of Pharmacy, Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Translational Science, University of Tennessee Health Science Center , Memphis, Tennessee , USA

3. Department of Burn Administration, Regional One Health , Memphis, Tennessee , USA

4. Department of Burn Rehabilitation, Regional One Health , Memphis, Tennessee , USA

5. Department of Surgery, Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Florida Health , Gainesville, Florida , USA

6. College of Medicine, Department of Surgery, University of Tennessee Health Science Center , Memphis, Tennessee , USA

Abstract

Abstract Due to high prevalence in the south, understanding the injury pattern, healthcare burden, and cost of burn injuries associated with burning yard and trash debris are important for effective prevention. This 5-year retrospective, single-center study included patients sustaining an open flame burn injury due to burning brush or trash. Based on primary residence of the 136 patients, 56% had access to free municipal waste disposal, 25% could have had access with additional payment, and 18% did not have access. The median (Q1 and Q3) age and total body surface area (TBSA) burned was 50 (32, 66.5) years and 5% (2.5, 12), respectively, with 36% having some portion of full-thickness injury. One-third had some form of substance use. There were 151 total operations with a median of 1 (0, 1.5) per patient. There were 1,620 hospital days utilized (~6.6% of available bed-days per study period). Twenty-five percent were discharged with a paired functional status worse than pre-injury. Patients with some degree of pre-injury function limitations had a 3-fold higher length of stay (10 vs 3 days; P = .023). Patients with lower pre-injury functionality had almost four times higher mortality (23.7% vs 6.3%; P = .085). There were 9 (6.7%) deaths with an average (±SD) of 74.3 ± 13.1 years of age, median of 33% (31, 43) TBSA, and median full-thickness TBSA of 32% (21, 44). Total hospital charges exceeded $32.6 million with a median of $32,952.26 ($8,790.48, $103,113.95) per patient. Focusing future outreach efforts on education and resource availability may prevent future waste-burning injuries.

Funder

Medline Industries

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

Reference11 articles.

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