• J Burn Care Rehabil · May 1992

    Reorganization of a burn unit in response to underutilization: a critical assessment.

    • J B Fortune, J K Luniewski, K E Rodney, P J Feustel, and J M Millett.
    • Department of Surgery, Albany Medical Center Hospital, New York 12208.
    • J Burn Care Rehabil. 1992 May 1;13(3):348-55.

    AbstractThe incidence of burn injury in the United States has declined over the past few years, resulting in a dramatic decrease in the number of admissions to burn centers. This decrease has generated considerable concern, leading to a variety of proposals to modify burn units to control the cost of inpatient care. In 1986 Albany Medical Center Hospital, a 654-bed regional academic health sciences center, closed its burn unit and implemented a program to manage thermally injured patients in the intensive and progressive care areas of the medical center. A retrospective study was performed to compare patient outcomes and length of stay for the dedicated burn unit and the integrated burn program. Between the year before and the year after this change there was no significant difference in mortality rate, length of stay, or number of positive blood cultures. The relationship between burn severity and length of stay was unaltered by the burn program change. A comparison of data collected just after the change to those collected 2 years later again showed no difference, except that the annual census had dropped more than 50%. The results suggest that burn units can be converted to integrated burn programs without compromising patient care outcomes, although the lack of a cohesive burn team and the unavailability of beds designated for patients with burns ultimately resulted in a deemphasis of the burn program and consequent marked reduction in the number of patients with burns seen in the institution.

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