9 research outputs found

    Terminology and methods used to differentiate injury intent of hospital burn patients in South Asia: Results from a systematic scoping review

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    Introduction: A key component in the classification of all injury types is to differentiate whether the injury was deliberately inflicted and by whom, commonly known as intent in the surveillance literature. These data guide patient care and inform surveillance strategies. South Asia is believed to have the greatest number of intentional burn injuries, but national surveillance data is not disaggregated by injury intent. Scientific literature can be used for injury surveillance where national data collection does not exist. In order to synthesise research findings, it is essential to assess the potential impact of misclassification bias. We therefore conducted a systematic scoping review to understand terminology and methods used to differentiate injury intent of hospital burn patients in South Asia.Methods: We followed the methods in our registered protocol (https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/DCYNQ). Studies met defined population, concept, context, and study design criteria. The databases Embase, MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycInfo, and PakMediNet were searched. Two reviewers independently screened results. Data were extracted in a standardised manner and verified. The rigour of the method used to differentiate injury intent was appraised.Results: 1435 articles were screened. Of these, 89 met our inclusion criteria. Most articles were from India and Pakistan, and used an observational study design. There were 14 stem terms used in the articles. The most common was cause . There were 40 classifier terms. The most common were accident , suicide , and homicide . Few articles defined these terms. The method used to differentiate injury intent was only described explicitly in 17% of articles and the rigour of the methods used were low. Where methods of differentiation were described, they appear to be based on patient or family report rather than multidisciplinary assessment.Conclusion: The heterogeneity in terms, lack of definitions, and limited investigation of injury intent means this variable is likely to be prone to misclassification bias. We strongly recommend that the global burn community unites to develop a common data element, including definitions and methods of assessment, for the concept of burn injury intent to enable more reliable data collection practices and interstudy comparisons

    Aesthetic outcome of different subunits of face with various modalities of reconstruction in facial basal cell carcinoma

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    Background:  The incidence of basal cell carcinoma(bcc) involving face is on rise. One of the most promising therapies to this tumour is excision, which leaves a defect that has to be reconstructed in a way that would bring the best possible aesthetic and functional outcome. Aesthetically face is classified into many subunits, each contributing cumulatively to the final appearance of face. Reconstructing these subunits after the excision of bcc to impart a near normal appearance is a very challenging task. The outcome depends on various aspects like the skin type,  photodamage , the subunit involved and the type of reconstruction . Aim: This study aims to assess the effect of skin type , photodamage, the site of bcc and the type of reconstruction on the aesthetic outcome through modified Vancouver scar scale scoring system.  Material and methods : A prospective study was conducted on 53 patients with facial basal cell carcinoma from February 2020 to February 2022. Patients were classified into Fitzpatrick types . Photodamages were assessed. Keloidal tendencies were ruled out.&nbsp

    Medial plantar artery flap: An indispensable classic for sensate heel reconstruction

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    Background: The unique ability of the thick glabrous skin of the plantar heel to withstand body weight while also providing protective sensory feedback makes soft-tissue coverage of the plantar heel a particularly challenging aspect of foot reconstruction. In this study, we present the outcomes and complications associated with medial plantar artery perforator (MPAP) flap reconstruction of plantar heel. Methods: The study was a retrospective study conducted over four years, and included 22 patients with soft-tissue injury to the plantar heel. All patients underwent MPAP flap for coverage of the defect. We studied the  mode of injury, defect size, flap size, duration of the procedure, complications associated with the flap and donor site, time to full weight bearing and return of protective sensation and 2-point discrimination in comparison with opposite heel. Results: We studied 22 cases with soft-tissue defects of the heel that included post-traumatic defects (7), non-healing diabetic ulcers (6), trophic ulcers (4) and post- tumor excision defects (melanoma-3, squamous cell carcinoma-2). Mean flap dimension was 24 sq.cm. 18 flaps had complete survival, while 2 flaps had necrosis of the distal edge and 2 flaps underwent complete necrosis.&nbsp

    Establishing self-harm registers: the role of process mapping to improve quality of surveillance data globally

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    Self-harm registers (SHRs) are an essential means of monitoring rates of self-harm and evaluating preventative interventions, but few SHRs exist in countries with the highest burden of suicides and self-harm. Current international guidance on establishing SHRs recommends data collection from emergency departments, but this does not adequately consider differences in the provision of emergency care globally. We aim to demonstrate that process mapping can be used prior to the implementation of an SHR to understand differing hospital systems. This information can be used to determine the method by which patients meeting the SHR inclusion criteria can be most reliably identified, and how to mitigate hospital processes that may introduce selection bias into these data. We illustrate this by sharing in detail the experiences from a government hospital and non-profit hospital in south India. We followed a five-phase process mapping approach developed for healthcare settings during 2019–2020. Emergency care provided in the government hospital was accessed through casualty department triage. The non-profit hospital had an emergency department. Both hospitals had open access outpatient departments. SHR inclusion criteria overlapped with conditions requiring Indian medicolegal registration. Medicolegal registers are the most likely single point to record patients meeting the SHR inclusion criteria from multiple emergency care areas in India (e.g., emergency department/casualty, outpatients, other hospital areas), but should be cross-checked against registers of presentations to the emergency department/casualty to capture less-sick patients and misclassified cases. Process mapping is an easily reproducible method that can be used prior to the implementation of an SHR to understand differing hospital systems. This information is pivotal to choosing which hospital record systems should be used for identifying patients and to proactively reduce bias in SHR data. The method is equally applicable in low-, middle- and high-income countries
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