Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3105602 Burns 2009 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Although self-inflicted burns comprise a rather small percentage of patients treated in burn units, they represent a challenging subgroup for the specialist team. According to the literature, these patients, often with a past psychiatric history, remain in the hospital longer due to delayed wound healing, increased number of operative sessions and reduced compliance.The aim of this study was to analyse the incidence of psychiatric disorders and the overall outcome in patients with self-inflicted burns admitted to the Vienna Burn Centre in the past 11 years. We therefore reviewed the following parameters: past psychiatric history, burn extent, burn depth, mechanism of burn, treatment, length of hospital stay, and mortality. Based on our evaluation patients can be grouped into three distinct categories based on a simple two-axis diagram, the Self-Inflicted-Burns-Typology (SIB-T), including the parameters “psychiatric disorder” and “suicide attempt”: “typical”, “delirious” and “reactive”. These three groups seem to differ in treatment outcome and later course of rehabilitation.

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