| Literature DB >> 35783652 |
Michela Venturi1, Francesco Bruzziches1,2, Catuscia Orlandi1, Mattia Altini3, Pietro Rubegni2, Davide Melandri1.
Abstract
Burn care has rapidly improved over the past decades, but health innovations are expensive. We present the first study focusing on the economic burden of exclusive denatured alcohol-induced burns. The goal of this study was to determine costs for the public health system due to inpatients' burn care because of these specific burns. Moreover, we aimed to observe the incidence of methylated spirit-related burns in the past 20 years. We performed an observational retrospective study in our burn unit including all patients with a denatured alcohol-related burn injury from 1 January 2001 to 31 December 2020. A total of 503 patients with a mean burn size of 24% were hospitalized; the mean annual total costs per patient was €43,879, varying from €31,518 to €63,274.00€; the total costs for denatured alcohol-related burns during the period 2001-2020 was €21,145,076. We noted an increasing incidence of denatured alcohol-related burns and related costs over the years, especially in the last decade. Our results highlight that burns by methylated spirits are still a real and expanding problem. Therefore, authorities should focus on sales rules, characteristics of the containers, and education of people who misuse denatured alcohol, based on historical habits of use. To reduce the socioeconomic costs of burns, future intervention strategies and studies from the dermatology community and burn specialists should focus on prevention programs and prompt wound healing to shorten the length of hospital stay, enable quick return to work, and improve the outcomes of patients with burns.Entities:
Keywords: burns; costs; costs analysis; denatured alcohol; methylated spirits
Year: 2022 PMID: 35783652 PMCID: PMC9241105 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2022.914976
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
FIGURE 1Denatured alcohol-induced burns over all-cause burns in inpatients in our burn center in the period 2001–2020.
Sex, age, total body surface area (TBSA) of the examined patients.
| Patient data | |
| Females | 46.52% |
| Mean age | 53.7 |
| Mean females | 55.4 |
| Mean age males | 52.2 |
| Mean TBSA burned | 24% |
| Second-degree burn or more | 17% |
| Median TBSA burned | 20 |
| Mode TBSA burned | 20 |
| S.D. in TBSA burned | 17.01 |
FIGURE 2Incidence of denatured alcohol burns in the examined period 2001–2020.
FIGURE 3Mean annual total costs per patient injured because of denatured alcohol.