JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Early burn center transfer shortens the length of hospitalization and reduces complications in children with serious burn injuries.

Prompt transfer of the child with acute burns can be difficult from distant or inaccessible locations, and it is believed that the outcomes of children with serious burns whose transfer to a specialized burn care facility is delayed may be compromised. A 4-year experience with 16 consecutive children with serious burns (> or =20% of the body surface area) whose transfer to a burn care facility was delayed for 5 or more days was reviewed to document the difficulties that can follow such delays. These 16 children had an average age of 8.6+/-1.6 years and an average wound size of 57.6%+/-5.8% of the body surface area, and they arrived a mean of 16.3+/-3.4 days after the injury (range, 5 to 44 days). These children had undergone an average of 1 operation, excluding escharotomies, at referring facilities. Only 4 (25%) of the children had no infectious focus at transfer, and at admission resistant bacteria were recovered from 9 (56%) of the children and fungal organisms were found in 10 (63%). Compared with a concurrently managed matched control group of patients admitted to the burn center within 24 hours of injury, the delayed-transfer group had statistically significantly more bacteremia, renal dysfunction, wound sepsis, and central venous catheter days. It was also more expensive to manage these children; the delayed-transfer group required statistically significantly longer to achieve 95% wound closure, and they had greater total lengths of hospital stay and more rehabilitation days. The early transfer of children with serious burns to a specialized burn center may truncate hospitalization and thereby reduce costs.

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