The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation
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The child with burns suffers severe pain at the time of the burn and during subsequent treatment and rehabilitation. Pain has adverse physiological and emotional effects, and research suggests that pain management is an important factor in better outcomes. There is increasing understanding of the private experience of pain, and how children benefit from honest preparation for procedures. ⋯ Empirical evaluation of various hypnotic, cognitive, behavioral, and sensory treatment methods is advancing. Multidisciplinary assessment helps to integrate psychological and pharmacological pain-relieving interventions to reduce emotional and mental stress, and family stress as well. Optimal care encourages burn teams to integrate pain guidelines into protocols and critical pathways for improved care.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Mar 2002
Burn centers should be involved in prevention of occupational electrical injuries.
Electrical injuries are uncommon, comprising 10% of our regional burn center admissions during a 9-year period. The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence, type, and location of occupation-related electrical injuries in an attempt to focus our injury prevention and outreach efforts. ⋯ Of the 95 patients admitted for electrical burns, 81% (n = 77) were occupational injuries. This rate of injury suggests that prevention efforts should be directed at work sites and partnerships should be developed between burn centers and businesses to reduce the incidence of injuries.
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Following care in a burn unit, regular outpatient visits with burn specialists are required. The practical use of telemedicine in this context is unknown. The objective of this study was to evaluate patient and physician satisfaction with teleconsultations in follow-up burn care and to assess the costs and benefits of these teleconsultations. ⋯ Patients were very satisfied with their teleconsultations and found them more economical and time efficient than in-person visits. The consulting physician felt teleconsultations were as satisfactory as clinic visits for the purposes of diagnosis and burn management. Our results support the ongoing use of telemedicine in the follow-up care of burn patients.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 2002
Does cartoon movie distraction decrease burned children's pain behavior?
The purpose of this study was to evaluate cartoon movie viewing as a practical and low-cost intervention to decrease burned children's pain behavior during dressing changes. Thirteen children, 4 to 12 years of age, with a mean TBSA burn of 7.9% were assessed using a reversal, single-subject experimental design. The experimental condition consisted of the presentation of a cartoon movie as a nonpharmacologic intervention in conjunction with a standardized analgesic medication. ⋯ A simple, easily applicable, and low-cost distraction intervention such as presenting cartoon movies does not seem to be sufficiently powerful to measurably reduce burned children's distress during dressing changes. Findings are based on purely observational data. Inclusion of self-report measures in future studies might reveal intervention effects on anxiety and subjective pain perception.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 2002
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialA comparison of oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate and oral oxycodone for pediatric outpatient wound care.
Analgesia for pediatric burn wound care in the outpatient clinic is constrained by time, personnel, and/or monitoring capabilities, yet may improve patient satisfaction and comfort, clinic efficiency, and patient throughput. The ideal analgesic in this increasingly common setting should be palatable, provide potent, rapid, and brief analgesia, and require minimal appropriate monitoring. Using a placebo-controlled, double-blind design we compared oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate (OTFC, approximately 10 microg/kg) and oral oxycodone (0.2 mg/kg) in 22 pediatric outpatient wound care procedures (ages 5-14 years). ⋯ OTFC and oral oxycodone resulted in similar outcome measures and vital signs, and no significant side effects. The taste of OTFC was preferred. We conclude that OTFC and oral oxycodone are safe and effective analgesics in the setting of monitored outpatient wound care in children, and that OTFC offers the advantage of improved palatability.