Factors contributing to longer length of stay in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children hospitalised for burn injury

Abstract Background Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children have higher incidence, severity and hospital length of stay for their acute burn injuries than other Australian children. We examined factors contributing to longer length of stay for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children wi...

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Main Authors: Courtney Ryder, Tamara Mackean, Kate Hunter, Kurt Towers, Kris Rogers, Andrew J. A. Holland, Rebecca Ivers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:Injury Epidemiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40621-020-00278-7
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spelling doaj-5976dcf5b9a546cda6b6c9e6f55132e62020-11-25T03:36:39ZengBMCInjury Epidemiology2197-17142020-10-017111110.1186/s40621-020-00278-7Factors contributing to longer length of stay in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children hospitalised for burn injuryCourtney Ryder0Tamara Mackean1Kate Hunter2Kurt Towers3Kris Rogers4Andrew J. A. Holland5Rebecca Ivers6The George Institute for Global Health Australia, UNSWThe George Institute for Global Health Australia, UNSWThe George Institute for Global Health Australia, UNSWWatto Paruna Aboriginal Health for the Northern Adelaide Local Health NetworkThe George Institute for Global Health Australia, UNSWSydney Medical School, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of SydneyThe George Institute for Global Health Australia, UNSWAbstract Background Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children have higher incidence, severity and hospital length of stay for their acute burn injuries than other Australian children. We examined factors contributing to longer length of stay for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children with an acute burn injury. Methods Burns Registry of Australia and New Zealand admissions of children < 16 years of age between October 2009 and July 2018 were analysed. Descriptive statistics explored patient and injury characteristics; Cox-regression models estimated characteristics associated with longer length of stay. Knowledge Interface methodology and Indigenous research methods were used throughout. Results A total of 723 children were identified as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and 6257 as other Australian. The median hospital length of stay for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children (5 days [CI 5–6]) was 4 days longer than other Australian children (1 day [CI 1–2]). Remoteness, flame burns, high percentage total body surface area (%TBSA) and full thickness burns were factors associated with longer length of stay for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. Similar prognostic factors were identified for other Australian children along with Streptococcus sp. and Staphylococcus sp. infection. Conclusion Remoteness, flame burns, %TBSA, and full thickness burns are prognostic factors contributing to extended hospital length of stay for all Australian children. These factors are more prevalent in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, impacting length of stay. Treatment programs, clinical guidelines, and burns policies should engage with the unique circumstances of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children to mitigate inequities in health.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40621-020-00278-7Length of stayAboriginal and Torres Strait islanderChildrenBurn injuryPrognostic factors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Courtney Ryder
Tamara Mackean
Kate Hunter
Kurt Towers
Kris Rogers
Andrew J. A. Holland
Rebecca Ivers
spellingShingle Courtney Ryder
Tamara Mackean
Kate Hunter
Kurt Towers
Kris Rogers
Andrew J. A. Holland
Rebecca Ivers
Factors contributing to longer length of stay in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children hospitalised for burn injury
Injury Epidemiology
Length of stay
Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander
Children
Burn injury
Prognostic factors
author_facet Courtney Ryder
Tamara Mackean
Kate Hunter
Kurt Towers
Kris Rogers
Andrew J. A. Holland
Rebecca Ivers
author_sort Courtney Ryder
title Factors contributing to longer length of stay in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children hospitalised for burn injury
title_short Factors contributing to longer length of stay in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children hospitalised for burn injury
title_full Factors contributing to longer length of stay in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children hospitalised for burn injury
title_fullStr Factors contributing to longer length of stay in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children hospitalised for burn injury
title_full_unstemmed Factors contributing to longer length of stay in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children hospitalised for burn injury
title_sort factors contributing to longer length of stay in aboriginal and torres strait islander children hospitalised for burn injury
publisher BMC
series Injury Epidemiology
issn 2197-1714
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Background Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children have higher incidence, severity and hospital length of stay for their acute burn injuries than other Australian children. We examined factors contributing to longer length of stay for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children with an acute burn injury. Methods Burns Registry of Australia and New Zealand admissions of children < 16 years of age between October 2009 and July 2018 were analysed. Descriptive statistics explored patient and injury characteristics; Cox-regression models estimated characteristics associated with longer length of stay. Knowledge Interface methodology and Indigenous research methods were used throughout. Results A total of 723 children were identified as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and 6257 as other Australian. The median hospital length of stay for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children (5 days [CI 5–6]) was 4 days longer than other Australian children (1 day [CI 1–2]). Remoteness, flame burns, high percentage total body surface area (%TBSA) and full thickness burns were factors associated with longer length of stay for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. Similar prognostic factors were identified for other Australian children along with Streptococcus sp. and Staphylococcus sp. infection. Conclusion Remoteness, flame burns, %TBSA, and full thickness burns are prognostic factors contributing to extended hospital length of stay for all Australian children. These factors are more prevalent in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, impacting length of stay. Treatment programs, clinical guidelines, and burns policies should engage with the unique circumstances of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children to mitigate inequities in health.
topic Length of stay
Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander
Children
Burn injury
Prognostic factors
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40621-020-00278-7
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