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Journal Article

Citation

Lowell G, Quinlan K. J. Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2016; 81(4 Suppl 1 Forging New Frontiers: The 20th Annual Conference of the Injury Free): S20-S24.

Affiliation

Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/TA.0000000000001050

PMID

26998780

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous studies have shown that children as young as 18-months-old can open a microwave and remove its contents causing sometimes severe scalds. Though this mechanism may be uniquely preventable by an engineering fix, no national estimate of this type of child burn injury has been reported.

METHODS: We analyzed the Consumer Product Safety Commission's National Electronic Injury Surveillance System data on emergency department-treated microwave-related burn injuries from January 2002 through December 2012 in children aged 12-months to 4-years. Based on the narrative description of how the injury occurred, we defined a case as a burn with a mechanism of either definitely or probably involving a child opening a microwave oven and accessing the heated contents themself. National estimates of cases and their characteristics were calculated.

RESULTS: Over the 11-years studied, an estimated 10,902 (95% CI (8,231-13,573)) microwave-related burns occurred in children aged 12-months to 4-years. Of these, 7,274 (66.7%) (95% CI (5,135-9,413) were cases of children burned after accessing the contents of the microwave themselves. A total of 1,124 (15.5%) cases required hospitalization or transfer from the treating ED. Narratives for children as young as 12-months-old described the child being able to access microwave contents themselves. The most commonly burned body parts were the upper trunk (3,056 cases) and the face (1,039 cases). The most common scalding substances were water (2,863 cases), noodles (1,011 cases) and soup (931 cases).

CONCLUSIONS: The majority of microwave-related burns in young children occur as a result of the child accessing the microwave and removing the contents themselves. Over 600 young children are treated in US EDs annually for such burns. Children as young as 12-months-old sustained burns due to this mechanism of injury. These burns could be prevented with a redesign of microwaves to thwart young children from being able to open the microwave oven door. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: III, Epidemiological.


Language: en

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