Considerations for thermal injury: The elderly as a sensitive population

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Abstract

As the baby boom population in North America ages, one of the populations at greatest risk of thermal injury continues to expand. According to the US Census Bureau in 2000, the population of US citizens who are 75 years and older was 16,548,000 (6.0%). By 2010 this figure is projected to be 19,101,000 (6.4%), and by 2050 it is expected to exceed 54, 094,000 (13.4%) [1]. Annually, in the United States and Canada, 1.25 million people suffer burn injuries [2]. Populations identified at increased risk of burns include infants and young children, older adults, and people with any type of disability [3-6]. Many of the burns reported are from scalds. Scald injuries are painful, require prolonged treatment, and may result in lifelong scarring and even death. Most burn injuries happen in the home with tap water scalds occurring in the bathroom or kitchen [3, 7, 8]. Burns can also be caused by therapies in medical treatment facilities [9] or from therapeutic use of heat in the home. This premise is supported by a jointly issued public health advisory in 1995 by the United States Food and Drug Administration and the Consumer Products Safety Commission on electric heating pads. This advisory reported approximately 1,600 heating pad burns treated in the emergency room annually and that approximately 45% of those patients were over 65 years of age [10]. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2010.

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Bjerke, D. L. (2010). Considerations for thermal injury: The elderly as a sensitive population. In Textbook of Aging Skin (pp. 159–171). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-89656-2_16

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