2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.burns.2014.11.012
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Burns in Nepal: A population based national assessment

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Cited by 37 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…14,16,17,22,23 A recent population-based study in Nepal showed 60.4% of burns were due to hot liquid and/or hot objects, and 39.6% due to open fire or explosion. 10 Scalds and contact burns in adults are usually less severe than flame burns, which explains the lower proportion of scalds in this and other adult hospital reports, 21 compared with community and paeditaric hospital reports. 18,27 Males were more likely to experience electrical burns than females, and the proportion of electrical burns in this study (13%) is significantly higher than that observed in high-income countries, for example, 2.9% of burn admissions in Western Australia.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…14,16,17,22,23 A recent population-based study in Nepal showed 60.4% of burns were due to hot liquid and/or hot objects, and 39.6% due to open fire or explosion. 10 Scalds and contact burns in adults are usually less severe than flame burns, which explains the lower proportion of scalds in this and other adult hospital reports, 21 compared with community and paeditaric hospital reports. 18,27 Males were more likely to experience electrical burns than females, and the proportion of electrical burns in this study (13%) is significantly higher than that observed in high-income countries, for example, 2.9% of burn admissions in Western Australia.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…[3, 29, 30] Conversely, community-based surveys in Nepal and Sierra Leone during peacetime found that 2% and 4% of respondents had suffered a burn injury, respectively. [24, 31] Wartime studies from Croatia, Bosnia, Lebanon and Afghanistan also described burns being common in all age groups, in contrast to usual high-risk groups in peacetime, namely women and children. [29, 30, 32–35] These data reinforce findings from insecure countries by reporting 10% of all injuries were burns.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[43–47] Significant disability was analogously common in Baghdad after burn injury (40%); the proportion of burn injuries that resulted in disability documented by a similar community-based survey from Nepal after the civil war there was only 13%. [31] These results suggest that burn prevention initiatives and the Iraqi healthcare system are in need of significant assistance to reduce the death and disability from burn injury until insecurity recedes and reconstruction successful.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tackling burns must focus on public sector intervention, education, prevention, healthcare capacity and access to care, and on socioeconomic problems and situations 16. Increased efforts in all spheres are likely to lead to a significant reduction in burn-related death and disability 16. Public education is the most important factor to prevent fire burns.…”
Section: Global Health Problem Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%