• J Burn Care Rehabil · Sep 1992

    Mixing inpatient with outpatient care: establishing an outpatient clinic on a burn unit.

    • T Coffee, L Yurko, and R B Fratianne.
    • Department of Nursing, MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, OH 44109.
    • J Burn Care Rehabil. 1992 Sep 1; 13 (5): 587-9.

    AbstractOutpatient care of patients with burns is an important aspect of a total health care plan. Changes in the health care system, which focuses on cost containment, force reevaluation of the methods used for delivery of high-tech care, particularly in areas such as burn care. Great advances that have taken place over the past decade in the field of burn care have enabled health care providers to treat more patients with burns as outpatients. Those who are specially trained in burn care continue to be the optimal caregivers. The appropriate facilities, spray tables, hydrotherapy, and dressing rooms in which patients with burns are treated are equally important and must be adapted to meet the needs of patients who are ambulatory. The goals of an outpatient burn clinic should be to provide daily wound care and patient education to prevent unnecessary admissions and to promote early discharge for hospitalized patients. Nurses trained in burn care are the optimal providers of ambulatory burn care; therefore the clinic location should be where the caregivers are available. Several obstacles needed to be overcome before an outpatient clinic could be established on the burn unit itself. Wound care is now provided by burn unit nurses, which leads to better results and more consistent follow-up. Patient satisfaction is increased, patient teaching is provided by experienced staff, unnecessary admissions are prevented, and patients are able to be discharged from the hospital earlier or to be followed as outpatients even if surgery is eventually required.

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