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ORIGINAL ARTICLE |
Department of Surgery, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine, USA
Correspondence to:
Dr David E Clark, Department of Surgery, Maine Medical Center, 887 Congress Street, Portland ME 04102, USA (
clarkd{at}poa.mmc.org)
ObjectivesTo determine changes in the incidence of burn injury since the regionalization of burn care and intensification of fire prevention initiatives that occurred in Maine during the 1970s.
MethodsDeath certificate data from Maine and the United States for deaths due to fire or burns were obtained for 196098. Hospitalization and burn registry data were obtained for Maine from 197398. Frequencies and incidence rates were compared over time and, where possible, between Maine and the United States.
ResultsDuring 196079, annual burn mortality in Maine averaged 5.1/100 000, with random variation. After this, the rate declined steadily to an average annual level of 1.4/100 000 during 199396. For the entire United States, average annual mortality declined from 4.2/100 000 during 196164 to 1.5/100 000 during 199396. Reduction in mortality has been principally due to prevention of dwelling fires. Hospitalization for burns in Maine was 34.8/100 000 during 197376 and declined to 10.6/100 000 during 199598.
ConclusionsBurn prevention measures have dramatically reduced the incidence of death and hospitalization resulting from burns in Maine.
Keywords: burn; fatality; epidemiology; surveillance
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