Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries
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Burn care is a relatively small, mutidisciplinary field with variability in practices between centers. Given these factors, survey studies are frequently used to better understand practice variations, establish guidelines, and direct future research. If survey research is poorly designed or reported, it limits the ability to form meaningful conclusions. This study evaluates the quality of survey studies published in burn care and determines areas of improvement to increase generalizability. ⋯ Survey reporting in the burn care literature is generally inconsistent, limiting the ability to apply this research into practice.
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To describe the course of the outbreak and infection control measures to stop the spread of sequence type 15 OXA-23-producing Acinetobacter baumannii in the Burn Center of Uppsala University Hospital, between November 2014 and the end of April 2015. ⋯ Higher awareness and increased compliance with hand hygiene and dress code as well as intensified cleaning protocols of the environment and equipment were successfully established and likely to have led to stop the spread of sequence type 15 OXA-23-producing Acinetobacter baumannii.
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Observational Study
Bismuth/petroleum gauze plus high density polyethylene vs. bismuth/petroleum gauze: A comparison of donor site healing and patient comfort.
Skin grafting continues to be a fundamental component of burn treatment and inherently, a donor site must be created and treated. Burn surgeons agree that specific dressings may have a significant affect on donor site healing, but we have no consensus as to which dressing provides maximum benefit. ⋯ Clinically and subjectively, we found no discernible differences between the 2 dressing regimens. Thus, bismuth/petroleum gauze alone is the more cost effective dressing choice. Our burn center continues to use bismuth/petroleum gauze alone as its standard of care for donor site dressings and will continue to try to define the optimal donor site dressing.
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Keloids are intractable scar diseases and sometimes undergo hospitalization. This study aims to represent current status of keloid management in a national sample of hospitalized scar cases. ⋯ When viewed at the national level, keloid occupies an important part in scar management in Chinese tertiary hospitals. Demographic and clinical differences between keloids and other scars facilitate understanding and promoting of individualized anti-scar therapeutic strategies.
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This analysis includes pooled safety data from 2 clinical trials (NCT01437852; NCT03005106) that evaluated the safety and efficacy of StrataGraft in patients with deep partial-thickness (DPT) burns. ⋯ StrataGraft was well tolerated by patients, with a safety profile similar to autograft. StrataGraft may offer a safe alternative to autograft for DPT burns.