Evaluation of a Streamlined Model of Care for Minor Burn Patients

Minor burns represent the majority of all burn patients in developed countries, yet little information regarding their outcomes is available in the literature. Minor burns at Royal Perth Hospital are provided routine outpatient clinic follow-up at 1 month postinjury resulting in increased ambulatory...

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Main Authors: Finlay, V., Hendrie, Delia, Allison, Garry, Phillips, M., Wood, Fiona, Edgar, D.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc. 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32978
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author Finlay, V.
Hendrie, Delia
Allison, Garry
Phillips, M.
Wood, Fiona
Edgar, D.
author_facet Finlay, V.
Hendrie, Delia
Allison, Garry
Phillips, M.
Wood, Fiona
Edgar, D.
author_sort Finlay, V.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Minor burns represent the majority of all burn patients in developed countries, yet little information regarding their outcomes is available in the literature. Minor burns at Royal Perth Hospital are provided routine outpatient clinic follow-up at 1 month postinjury resulting in increased ambulatory care demand and inefficiency due to high failure to attend rates. The authors hypothesized that improving patient education and using a posted quality-of-life survey in place of a 1-month outpatient clinic follow-up visit for minor burn patients would improve efficiency without compromising outcome compared to current standard practice. A sample of conservatively managed minor burn outpatients who healed within 14 days were administered a burn care education manual and discharged. Participants were assessed using postal Burn-Specific Health Scale-Brief and satisfaction surveys at 1 month postburn. Their responses were compared to those of patients who had received standard care. The intervention group had a higher, but not statistically significant, median BSHS-B score (156) than the comparison group (153) (P =.05). The intervention group also reported high levels of satisfaction with service. The new model of care is an appropriate strategy for management of minor burn. Its benefit over current hospital-based follow-up is that it saves one clinic appointment, improves efficiency related to nonattendance, and reduces patient burden.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-329782017-09-13T15:26:24Z Evaluation of a Streamlined Model of Care for Minor Burn Patients Finlay, V. Hendrie, Delia Allison, Garry Phillips, M. Wood, Fiona Edgar, D. model of care burns ambulatory care Burn-Specific Health Scale-Brief Minor burns represent the majority of all burn patients in developed countries, yet little information regarding their outcomes is available in the literature. Minor burns at Royal Perth Hospital are provided routine outpatient clinic follow-up at 1 month postinjury resulting in increased ambulatory care demand and inefficiency due to high failure to attend rates. The authors hypothesized that improving patient education and using a posted quality-of-life survey in place of a 1-month outpatient clinic follow-up visit for minor burn patients would improve efficiency without compromising outcome compared to current standard practice. A sample of conservatively managed minor burn outpatients who healed within 14 days were administered a burn care education manual and discharged. Participants were assessed using postal Burn-Specific Health Scale-Brief and satisfaction surveys at 1 month postburn. Their responses were compared to those of patients who had received standard care. The intervention group had a higher, but not statistically significant, median BSHS-B score (156) than the comparison group (153) (P =.05). The intervention group also reported high levels of satisfaction with service. The new model of care is an appropriate strategy for management of minor burn. Its benefit over current hospital-based follow-up is that it saves one clinic appointment, improves efficiency related to nonattendance, and reduces patient burden. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32978 10.1097/BCR.0b013e3182a2aa75 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc. restricted
spellingShingle model of care
burns
ambulatory care
Burn-Specific Health Scale-Brief
Finlay, V.
Hendrie, Delia
Allison, Garry
Phillips, M.
Wood, Fiona
Edgar, D.
Evaluation of a Streamlined Model of Care for Minor Burn Patients
title Evaluation of a Streamlined Model of Care for Minor Burn Patients
title_full Evaluation of a Streamlined Model of Care for Minor Burn Patients
title_fullStr Evaluation of a Streamlined Model of Care for Minor Burn Patients
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a Streamlined Model of Care for Minor Burn Patients
title_short Evaluation of a Streamlined Model of Care for Minor Burn Patients
title_sort evaluation of a streamlined model of care for minor burn patients
topic model of care
burns
ambulatory care
Burn-Specific Health Scale-Brief
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32978