# 47 Pediatric Burn Admissions: Where and When Matters

**Authors:** Erin E Ross, Justin Gillenwater, Haig A Yenikomshian

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/jbcr/irae036.071 · Journal of Burn Care & Research: Official Publication of the American Burn Association · 2024-04-17

## TL;DR

Pediatric burn admissions are higher in certain seasons and areas with lower socioeconomic and educational opportunities.

## Contribution

This study links pediatric burn admissions to the Childhood Opportunity Index and identifies seasonal and geographic patterns.

## Key findings

- Burn admissions peak in June, July, and December, when children are out of school.
- Children in low-opportunity areas have about five times higher risk of burn admission.
- Burns are more common in urban areas with higher population density.

## Abstract

There have been variable trends reported in seasonality of pediatric burns. Furthermore, risk for burn injury and mortality after burn have been associated with poorer socioeconomic status. The Childhood Opportunity Index (COI), comprised of 29 parameters of childhood well-being across the domains of Education, Health & Environment, and Social & Economic, may be a more comprehensive metric by which to assess rates of pediatric burn admission. Here, we explored trends in pediatric burn admissions seasonally, geospatially, and by COI quintile.

After IRB approval, home zip code and date of injury for all pediatric burn admissions from 2016-2022 at an urban regional burn center. Each zip code in the US is assigned to a COI quintile from Q1 (very low) to Q5 (very high) opportunity, with a roughly equal number of children living in each quintile. Population of each zip code was obtained from US Census data. We assess the number of pediatric burn admissions by month of year and zip code, and risk for pediatric burn admission for children living in very high versus very low opportunity COI quintiles.

Across 470 pediatric burn admissions, there was a clear temporal trend with greater admissions in June, July and December, when children are out of school (Figure 1). Admissions for burn in children were also clustered in urban areas with higher population density (Figure 1). For all three COI sub-domains, there was an approximately five-fold increase in risk for admission for a burn for children residing in very low opportunity areas compared to children in very high opportunity areas. (Education OR 5.08 95% CI 3.54-7.27, Health & Environment OR 4.91 95% CI 3.34-7.12, Social & Economic OR 4.84 95% CI 3.41-6.86).

Severe pediatric burns are clustered in areas with low educational, environmental, and socioeconomic opportunity. Given the temporal association burns with the school year and strong relationship of pediatric burns with educational opportunity, child supervision is a potential target for further study.

Identifying community-level risk factors and region-specific temporal trends in pediatric burn injury can help identify highest yield areas for education and injury prevention efforts.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** burns (MONDO:0043519)

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11023311/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11023311