| Literature DB >> 24842981 |
P Wynn1, J Stewart2, A Kumar1, R Clacy1, F Coffey3, N Cooper4, C Coupland1, T Deave5, M Hayes6, E McColl7, R Reading8, A Sutton4, M Watson2, D Kendrick1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Scalds are one of the most common forms of thermal injury in young children worldwide. Childhood scald injuries, which mostly occur in the home, result in substantial health service use and considerable morbidity and mortality. There is little research on effective interventions to prevent scald injuries in young children.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24842981 PMCID: PMC4174015 DOI: 10.1136/injuryprev-2014-041255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inj Prev ISSN: 1353-8047 Impact factor: 2.399
Definition of exposures and confounding variables
Use of safety gates Kettles with curly or short cables Play pens (or travel cots) Stationary activity centres Not drinking hot drinks while holding a child Not passing hot drinks over a child Keeping hot drinks out of reach of children Storing kettles at back of work tops Use of back rings on cooker Turning saucepan handles away from edge of cooker Not using tablecloths Knowledge of hot tap water/thermostat temperature Using cold water first when running a bath Measuring bath water temperature Not leaving child without an adult in the bath or bathroom Not having children running baths Teaching children safety rules about hot liquids Has baby walker | Age Gender Ethnic group Family size and structure Housing tenure Receipt of state-provided means-tested benefits Single parenthood Adult unemployment in the household Overcrowding Deprivation (measured using the Index of Multiple Deprivation Distance of residence from hospital Use of out-of-home childcare Child behaviour (infant, early child and child behaviour questionnaires) Child health status (VAS Long-term health conditions Parental mental health (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) Parenting daily hassles Parental perception of child's ability to reach hot liquids (a series of questions on climbing, reaching, turning on taps, ability to open safety gates) |
PedsQL, pediatric quality of life inventory; VAS, visual analogue scale.