The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation
-
J Burn Care Rehabil · Mar 1990
Practice Guideline GuidelineHospital and prehospital resources for optimal care of patients with burn injury: guidelines for development and operation of burn centers. American Burn Association.
Each year in the United States burn injuries result in more than 500,000 hospital emergency department visits and approximately 70,000 acute inpatient admissions. Most burn injuries are relatively minor, and patients are discharged following outpatient treatment at the medical facility where they are first seen. Of those patients with injuries serious enough to require hospitalization, about 20,000 are admitted directly or by referral to hospitals with special capabilities in the treatment of burn injury. Hospitals with these service capabilities are normally termed "burn centers." This document defines the system, organizational structure, personnel, program, and physical facilities involved in establishing the eligibility of hospitals with the capability of being identified as burn centers.
-
Pulse oximetry is a noninvasive method of measuring arterial oxygen saturation. The value of oximetry in patients with burn injuries has been questioned because of a theoretic inaccuracy in the presence of carboxyhemoglobin. We studied pulse oximetry in 27 intubated patients with burn injuries to determine the accuracy of the method and then to determine whether oximetry could replace indwelling catheters presently used for arterial blood gas analysis. ⋯ The pulse oximeter predicted "adequate" ventilation in 78% of patients with a readout of 99% or above. The arterial PO2 was greater than or equal to 90 torr in 90% of patients with oximetric readouts greater than or equal to 98% and in 10% of patients with readouts less than 95%. Pulse oximetry is an accurate adjunct in the management of patients with burn injuries and in addition provides continuous real-time data not available with arterial blood gas sampling.
-
J Burn Care Rehabil · Mar 1990
Smoke inhalation and airway management at a regional burn unit: 1974 to 1983. II. Airway management.
According to criteria established to define patients with smoke inhalation, the airway management of all victims of smoke and burns (1974 to 1984; n = 805) was reviewed. Fourteen percent of all patients were intubated (n = 117); patients intubated on the day of injury (n = 41) were more likely to extubate themselves or have technical problems with the endotracheal tube. Twelve percent of patients with smoke inhalation without burns required endotracheal intubation versus 62% of those with burns. ⋯ The prolonged length of stay for patients with a tracheotomy relates to the severity of the burn. Tracheotomy was not the cause of death in any patient. The strategy of grafting the neck before tracheotomy was used successfully in eight patients.
-
One hundred burn care facilities in the United States were surveyed to determine the present use of hydrotherapy in burn care. It was found that 92% of the burn units that were polled practice this treatment in some form. ⋯ In most of these facilities, nurses perform the procedure. Although immersion therapy continues to play an important role in most burn care facilities, spray or shower techniques are also incorporated into many programs.