TY - JOUR PY - 2022// TI - A multi-institutional study evaluating pediatric burn injuries during the COVID-19 pandemic JO - Journal of burn care and research A1 - Georgeades, Christina M. A1 - Collings, Amelia T. A1 - Farazi, Manzur A1 - Fallat, Mary E. A1 - Minneci, Peter C. A1 - Sato, Thomas T. A1 - Speck, K. Elizabeth A1 - Van Arendonk, Kyle A1 - Deans, Katherine J. A1 - Falcone, Richard A. A1 - Foley, David S. A1 - Fraser, Jason A1 - Gadepalli, Samir A1 - Keller, Martin S. A1 - Kotagal, Meera A1 - Landman, Matthew P. A1 - Leys, Charles M. A1 - Markel, Troy A. A1 - Rubalcava, Nathan A1 - St Peter, Shawn D. A1 - Flynn-O'Brien, Katherine T. SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - During the COVID-19 pandemic, children were out of school due to Stay-at-Home orders. The objective of this study was to investigate how the COVID-19 pandemic may have impacted the incidence of burn injuries in children. Eight Level I Pediatric Trauma Centers participated in a retrospective study evaluating children <18 years old with traumatic injuries defined by the National Trauma Data Bank. Patients with burn injuries were identified by ICD-10 codes. Historical controls from March-September 2019 ("Control" cohort) were compared to patients injured after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic from March-September 2020 ("COVID" cohort). A total of 12,549 pediatric trauma patients were included, of which 916 patients had burn injuries. Burn injuries increased after the start of the pandemic (COVID 522/6711 [7.8%] vs. Control 394/5838 [6.7%], p=0.03). There were no significant differences in age, race, insurance status, burn severity, injury severity score, intent or location of injury, and occurrence on a weekday or weekend between cohorts. There was an increase in flame burns (COVID 140/522 [26.8%] vs. Control 75/394 [19.0%], p=0.01) and a decrease in contact burns (COVID 118/522 [22.6%] vs. Control 112/394 [28.4%], p=0.05). More patients were transferred from an outside institution (COVID 315/522 patients [60.3%] vs. Control 208/394 patients [52.8%], p=0.02), and intensive care unit length of stay increased (COVID median 3.5 days [interquartile range 2.0-11.0] vs. Control median 3.0 days [interquartile range 1.0-4.0], p=0.05). Pediatric burn injuries increased after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic despite Stay-at-Home orders intended to optimize health and increase public safety.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1559-047X UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac118 ID - ref1 ER -