» Articles » PMID: 21124232

Functional and Psychosocial Outcomes of Older Adults After Burn Injury: Results from a Multicenter Database of Severe Burn Injury

Overview
Journal J Burn Care Res
Specialty Emergency Medicine
Date 2010 Dec 3
PMID 21124232
Citations 31
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

A number of factors increase the susceptibility of older adults to burn injury. The majority of studies of older adults have focused on patient and injury factors related to mortality risk. However, little is known about the long-term functional and psychological outcomes of older adults after severe burn. The purpose of this study is to examine the long-term outcomes of older adults after burn injury. The authors performed an analysis of the outcomes of older adults (age 55 years or older) enrolled in a prospective study of burn injury outcomes. Change in living situation as well as distress, functional impairment, and quality of life were examined at discharge and at 6, 12, and 24 months after hospital discharge. Mixed effects modeling was performed to compare differences across age groups and time as well as to account for missing data. A total of 737 patients aged 55 years or older were enrolled and followed in the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research burn program. Patients in all age groups had significant deficits in Short Form-36, Functional Independence Measure, and Brief Symptom Inventory scores at time of discharge. Recovery of physical and psychosocial functioning was greatest from discharge to 6 months in patients aged 55 to 74 years and greatest at 1 year for patients aged 75 years or older. This study confirms that severe burn injury significantly impacts both functional outcome and psychosocial quality of life in older adults. However, the impact seems to be age related as are recovery trajectories. Rehabilitation programs lasting up to 1 year after injury could be of tremendous benefit in helping older adults achieve maximal potential recovery.

Citing Articles

Relations among Stigma, Quality of Life, Resilience, and Life Satisfaction in Individuals with Burn Injuries.

Watson J, Perrin P Eur Burn J. 2024; 3(1):145-155.

PMID: 39604181 PMC: 11575351. DOI: 10.3390/ebj3010012.


The impact of insurance disparities on long-term burn outcomes: A Burn Model System investigation.

Mehta A, Castillo-Angeles M, Shepler L, Carrougher G, Gibran N, Stewart B Burns. 2024; 51(1):107261.

PMID: 39522138 PMC: 11741934. DOI: 10.1016/j.burns.2024.08.027.


Rehabilitation of Geriatric Burn Patient Post-Meek Micrograft with Bilateral Partial Calcanectomy: A Case Report.

Gonzales J, Dy Ching Bing-Agsaoay D Acta Med Philipp. 2024; 58(1):79-83.

PMID: 38939850 PMC: 11199362. DOI: 10.47895/amp.vi0.6115.


Burn Patient Perspectives on Disability Weights and the Philosophy of Disability: A Gap in the Literature.

Won P, Celie K, Rutter C, Gillenwater T, Yenikomshian H Eur Burn J. 2024; 4(4):363-372.

PMID: 38528989 PMC: 10961916. DOI: 10.3390/ebj4040037.


Minority pediatric burn survivors undergo more burn operations: A single center's five-year experience.

Won P, Choe D, Gomez L, Gillenwater T, Yenikomshian H Burns. 2023; 50(3):760-766.

PMID: 37981485 PMC: 10999333. DOI: 10.1016/j.burns.2023.10.005.