Characteristics of fatal and hospital admissions for burns in Fiji: A population-based study (TRIP Project-2)

Type Journal Article - Burns
Title Characteristics of fatal and hospital admissions for burns in Fiji: A population-based study (TRIP Project-2)
Author(s)
Volume 38
Issue 5
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2012
Page numbers 758-762
URL http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=25985797
Abstract
Background

Over 95% of burn deaths are estimated to occur in low-and-middle-income countries. However, the epidemiology of burn-related injuries in Pacific Island Countries is unclear. This study investigated the incidence and demographic characteristics associated with fatal and hospitalised burns in Fiji.

Methods

This cross-sectional study utilised the Fiji Injury Surveillance in Hospital database to estimate the population-based incidence and contextual characteristics associated with burns resulting in death or hospital admission (=12 h) during a 12-month period commencing 1st October 2005.

Results

116 people were admitted to hospital or died as a result of burns during the study period accounting for an overall annual incidence of 17.8/100,000 population, and mortality rate of 3.4/100,000. Most (92.2%) burns occurred at home, and 85.3% were recorded as unintentional. Burns were disproportionately higher among Fijian children compared with Fijian–Indian children with the converse occurring in adulthood. In adults, Indian women were at particularly high risk of death from self-inflicted burns as a consequence of ‘conflict situations’.

Conclusion

Burns are a significant public health burden in Fiji requiring prevention and management strategies informed by important differences in the context of these injuries among the major ethic groups of the country.

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