727 Medical Student-Run Camp for Pediatric Burn Survivors: Patient, Family, and Volunteer Impact
Devon O'Brien, Joseph Maestas, Erin E Ross, Michael I Kim, Abigail Song, Justin Gillenwater

TL;DR
A medical student-run burn camp for children and their families improved community connections and access to resources, especially for minority groups.
Contribution
This study is the first to evaluate a student-run burn camp's impact on community building, resource access, and medical student volunteers.
Findings
All families and survivors reported increased community building after the camp.
Medical student volunteers felt they could improve lives and would likely volunteer again.
Most families found value in connecting with burn-related community resources.
Abstract
Burn day camp participation can improve self-esteem, communication skills, and depression/anxiety symptoms; however, survivors of racial minority groups have historically derived fewer benefits. Community building and resource access outcomes among burn camp participants and the potential impact of burn camp volunteerism on medical students have not been studied. Here, we assess the success of a medical student-run burn camp, serving predominantly minority groups, in building burn survivor community, improving resource access, and impacting medical student volunteers. School-aged burn survivors (6-17 years) treated at the LA General Regional Burn Center and their families were invited to a day camp involving community building and mentorship activities hosted by medical student volunteers in October 2022. Children participated in arts and crafts, science experiments, and field games…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNursing Education, Practice, and Leadership
