Burn Injury

Burns prevention and treatment an urgent priority for Indigenous children

SYDNEY, DEC 10 - A nine-year analysis of Australian children hospitalised for burns has found Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children were admitted three times as frequently as non-Indigenous children and spent five times longer in hospital.

A study led by The George Institute and UNSW School of Population Health analysed data from the Burns Registry of Australia and New Zealand on children under the age of 16 who were admitted to an Australian hospital with acute burns between October 2009 and July 2018.

“Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children represented just over ten percent of burns admissions - triple the incidence of other children,” said PhD candidate Courtney Ryder, lead author on the study.

“They also suffered more flame burns, more total body burns, and had a four times higher risk for contracting bacterial infections than other children,” she added.

Of the 6,980 children admitted for an acute burns injury, 723 identified as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander.

In Australia 44 percent of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children live in remote areas compared to ten percent in the broader Australian population, which limits access to local specialised outpatient services.

“This remoteness, and the severity of burns sustained, are the main reason for the lengthier hospital stays,” Courtney explained.

Burns are one of the most common injuries requiring medical attention for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. They are complex, resource intensive and costly to treat. Additionally, long admissions can cause significant trauma to children and their families, which impacts adversely on recovery and health outcomes.

“Burn survivors face months, or even years of ongoing treatment including further surgery and ongoing therapies, which places additional burdens on families, in addition to the physical, social and educational impacts on the child,” Courtney said.

She explained that current burns care is based on a Western model of medicine, focussing on the clinical characteristics of the injury. This is disconnected to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander models of health and well-being, which are holistic and interconnected and encompass the whole community.

“It is clear that we urgently need programs, policies, and clinical guidelines that target burns prevention and treatment in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, and these must be cognisant of the health inequities experienced by First Nations communities and tailored to their cultural needs to be effective,” she added.

Courtney is a PhD Candidate in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Program at The George Institute for Global Health and UNSW School of Population Health, and Senior Lecturer in Public Health and Indigenous Health at Flinders University.