TY - JOUR
T1 - Economics of Pediatric Burns
AU - Bass, Michael J.
AU - Phillips, Linda G.
PY - 2008/7
Y1 - 2008/7
N2 - Sustaining a burn injury sets inmotion a cycle of pain, disfigurement, and a search for survival. In pediatric burns, the injury extends to the parents where fear, ignorance, and helplessness forever change their lives. Pediatric burn injuries are caused by fire, hot liquids, clothing irons, hair curlers, caustic substances like drain cleaner, the grounding of an electrical source, and exposure to radiation. Efficiency in the delivery of pediatric burn care is critical. Maximizing resource utilization meanscontinual self-evaluation and economic analysis of therapeutic modalities. Griffiths et al found thatmost childhood burns are due to scalds, which can be treated for $1061 per percent burn. Paddock et al reduced the cost of treating superficial pediatric burns and reduced the length of stay in hospital using silver-impregnated gauze over traditional methods. Barrett et al found improved cosmesis of skin grafts using cultured epithelial autografts but at a substantially increased cost. Corpron et al showed that pediatric burn units that treat burns >10% total body surface area and operative treatment of pediatric burns regardless of size generate positive revenue. There is a paucity of evidentiary pediatric burn economic data. More research is needed to address areas of pediatric burn care inefficiency. Improving knowledge of cost in all health care endeavors will create competition and drive down expenditures.
AB - Sustaining a burn injury sets inmotion a cycle of pain, disfigurement, and a search for survival. In pediatric burns, the injury extends to the parents where fear, ignorance, and helplessness forever change their lives. Pediatric burn injuries are caused by fire, hot liquids, clothing irons, hair curlers, caustic substances like drain cleaner, the grounding of an electrical source, and exposure to radiation. Efficiency in the delivery of pediatric burn care is critical. Maximizing resource utilization meanscontinual self-evaluation and economic analysis of therapeutic modalities. Griffiths et al found thatmost childhood burns are due to scalds, which can be treated for $1061 per percent burn. Paddock et al reduced the cost of treating superficial pediatric burns and reduced the length of stay in hospital using silver-impregnated gauze over traditional methods. Barrett et al found improved cosmesis of skin grafts using cultured epithelial autografts but at a substantially increased cost. Corpron et al showed that pediatric burn units that treat burns >10% total body surface area and operative treatment of pediatric burns regardless of size generate positive revenue. There is a paucity of evidentiary pediatric burn economic data. More research is needed to address areas of pediatric burn care inefficiency. Improving knowledge of cost in all health care endeavors will create competition and drive down expenditures.
KW - Burn
KW - Cost
KW - Economics
KW - Pediatric
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=55449117330&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=55449117330&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/SCS.0b013e318175b58c
DO - 10.1097/SCS.0b013e318175b58c
M3 - Article
C2 - 18650705
AN - SCOPUS:55449117330
SN - 1049-2275
VL - 19
SP - 888
EP - 890
JO - Journal of Craniofacial Surgery
JF - Journal of Craniofacial Surgery
IS - 4
ER -