BURN INJURY

Thousands of children suffer burn-related injuries each year. Children ages 4 and under are at the greatest risk with an injury rate more than four times that of children ages 5 to 14. Burns have long been recognized as among the most painful and devastating injuries a person can sustain and survive. Burns often require long periods of rehabilitation, multiple skin grafts, painful physical therapy, and leave victims with lifelong physical and psychological trauma.

Scald burn injury (caused by hot liquids or steam) is the most common type of burn-related injury among young children while flame burns (caused by direct contact with fire) are more prevalent among older children. All children also are at risk for contact, electrical and chemical burns. Because young children have thinner skin than that of older children and adults, their skin burns at lower temperatures and more deeply. A child exposed to hot tap water at 140 degrees F for three seconds will sustain a third degree burn, an injury requiring hospitalization and skin grafts. Children, especially ages 4 and under, may not perceive danger, have less control of their environment, may lack the ability to escape a life-threatening burn situation, and may not be able to tolerate the physical stress of a post-burn injury.

DEATHS AND INJURIES

HOW AND WHERE BURN DEATHS AND INJURIES OCCUR

WHO IS AT RISK

BURN PREVENTION EFFECTIVENESS

BURN PROTECTION LAWS

HEALTH CARE COSTS AND SAVINGS

PREVENTION TIPS

12/99 This information was compiled by the National SAFE KIDS Campaign.