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Journal ArticleDOI

Burn mortality in Bangladesh: findings of national health and injury survey.

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TLDR
Burn is a considerable cause of death in Bangladesh and considering the magnitude of the problem it is very important to address it as a public health problem and develop a national burn prevention program.
Abstract
Objective The study was designed to explore the epidemiology of burn mortality in Bangladesh. Methods A population-based cross-sectional survey was conducted between January and December 2003. Nationally representative data was collected from 171,366 rural and urban households, comprising of a total population of 819,429. Results Overall mortality burn rate was 2.2 per 100,000 populations per year. The rate was higher amongst females. Most of the deaths were accidental in nature, only 5% of deaths were from self-inflected burn. The rate was higher amongst the rural population compared to the urban population. About 90% of the burn incidences were at home with the kitchen the most frequent place at home for burn incidence to occur. A majority, 89%, of the deaths were caused by flame burn. Cooking fire, heating fire and fire from kerosene lamps were the major sources of flames. The majority of burn deaths occurred during winter season. Conclusion Burn is a considerable cause of death in Bangladesh. Females, rural dwellers and populations of low socioeconomic condition are more vulnerable to burn injury. With simple intervention many of the deaths due to burn can be prevented. Considering the magnitude of the problem it is very important to address it as a public health problem and develop a national burn prevention program.

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Citations
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Fatal and non-fatal injury outcomes: results from a purposively sampled census of seven rural subdistricts in Bangladesh

TL;DR: The burden of fatal and non-fatal injuries in rural Bangladesh is substantial, accounting for 44 050 deaths and 21 million people suffering major events annually, and targeting drowning in children, falls among the elderly, and suicide among young female adults are urgently needed.
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Epidemiological trends and risk factors in major burns patients in South Korea: a 10-year experience.

TL;DR: The mortality of major burns has decreased but remains high, and ABSI scores predict burns-related mortality.
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Epidemiology and outcomes of burn injuries at a tertiary burn care center in Bangladesh

TL;DR: The frequency and severity of burn injuries are highlighted, vulnerable population groups are identified and common causes of burns in this large developing country of 160 million people are listed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mortality associated with burn injury- a cross sectional study from Karachi, Pakistan

TL;DR: Assessment of the mortality rate related to different types of burns injuries in Civil Hospital, Karachi during a period of two years from January 1st 2010 to December 31st, 2011 found fire burns was the most common cause of death.
Journal ArticleDOI

The geographical belt of self-immolation

TL;DR: It is observed that in the current world the authors are facing a geographical belt of self-immolation and the social issues/phenomena causing this should be explored.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors for burns in children: crowding, poverty, and poor maternal education

TL;DR: The presentation of burns in children and risk factors associated with their occurrence in a developing country as a basis for future prevention programs should be characterized and interventions should be designed accordingly to local risk factors.
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Landmarks in burn prevention

TL;DR: Novel strategies in the areas of law and regulation, environmental and consumer product design, and educational programs are identified and discussed to highlight landmarks in burn prevention.
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Epidemiology of childhood burn: Yield of largest community based injury survey in Bangladesh

TL;DR: The study findings confirmed that childhood burn was a major childhood illness in Bangladesh and an urgent and appropriate prevention programme is required to prevent these unwanted morbidities, disabilities and deaths due to burn.
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An investigation of the prevalence of psychological morbidity in burn-injured patients☆

TL;DR: The prevalence of clinically significant levels of anxiety, intrusions and avoidance remained similar at 2 weeks and 3 months postburn, however, the prevalence of depression and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder increased 6- and 4-times, respectively, by 3 months.
Journal ArticleDOI

A 1-year prospective study of burns in an Irish paediatric burns unit

TL;DR: It is suggested that a public health education campaign on this issue would help in reducing the incidence and severity of paediatric burn injuries in Ireland.
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