2017
DOI: 10.1097/bcr.0000000000000319
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Postdischarge Cause-of-Death Analysis of Combat-Related Burn Patients

Abstract: Combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have resulted in up to 8.8% of combat-related casualties suffering burns. From World War I through Desert Storm, burns have been associated with approximately 4% of the combat-related deaths. Experiencing a blast injury and exposure to killing and death while deployed has been shown to increase suicide risk. Although several studies of military populations have investigated risk factors for death among burn patients during the acute phase, no studies have reported mort… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…This is in stark contrast to the findings of a recent study of combat burn survivors in the United States, in which zero suicide deaths were observed after discharge. 28 While their findings might be related to misclassification bias, differences in suicide risk between civilian and military burn survivors might be related to several factors, including variation in the availability and provision of mental health supports to military personnel compared with civilians, and a pre-existing network of peer support within the military that might help to mitigate psychological stress. Characterization of the differences in health service delivery and resilience traits between military and civilian burn survivors might identify future targets for reducing self-harm and suicide risk among all burn survivors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is in stark contrast to the findings of a recent study of combat burn survivors in the United States, in which zero suicide deaths were observed after discharge. 28 While their findings might be related to misclassification bias, differences in suicide risk between civilian and military burn survivors might be related to several factors, including variation in the availability and provision of mental health supports to military personnel compared with civilians, and a pre-existing network of peer support within the military that might help to mitigate psychological stress. Characterization of the differences in health service delivery and resilience traits between military and civilian burn survivors might identify future targets for reducing self-harm and suicide risk among all burn survivors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mortality after discharge is low in both children with massive burns followed up for 15 years, and in military personnel followed up for 10 years after combat-related burns (5% and 1.3%, respectively), and the few deaths are rarely related to the burn. 94,95 Although the results are interesting the low generalisability makes it doubtful whether these results can be used for predictions among people with burns generally, as the conclusions were generated by two highly-specific subgroups.…”
Section: Do the Effects Of The Burn Continue To Be A Threat To Survivmentioning
confidence: 94%