Escolas Sandra M, Archuleta Debra J, Orman Jean A, Chung Kevin K, Renz Evan M
From the *US Army Medical Research Directorate-West, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington; †Clinical Trials and Burn Trauma Task Area; ‡Department of Statistics and Epidemiology, and §ISR Burn Unit, US Army Institute of Surgical Research, Fort Sam Houston, Texas; and ¶Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
J Burn Care Res. 2017 Jan/Feb;38(1):e158-e164. doi: 10.1097/BCR.0000000000000319.
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 mortality rates, cause-of-death, or the prevalence of suicide after hospital discharge. This study examined the case fatality rate, causes of death, and the prevalence of suicide among 830 combat burn patients discharged from the sole burn center in the U.S. Department of Defense, between March 7, 2003 and March 6, 2013. Cause-of-death was determined through the Armed Forces Medical Examiner's Office and the Office of the Secretary of Defense's National Death Index. A total of 11 deaths occurred among the 830 burn survivors, for an overall case fatality rate of 1.3%. Of the 11 who died, five deaths were related to accidental poisoning by exposure to drugs; three were related to operations of war (two after returning to the war zone), and the remaining three died from other accidental causes (one explosion and two vehicle crashes). There was no indication of suicide or suspicion of suicide as a cause-of-death for the former patients included in this study, suggesting that combat burn injury did not appear to increase the risk of death by suicide in our study population. Further research is needed to understand the factors that contribute to the apparent resilience of combat burn survivors.
伊拉克和阿富汗的战斗行动导致高达8.8%的与战斗相关的伤亡人员遭受烧伤。从第一次世界大战到沙漠风暴行动,烧伤约占与战斗相关死亡人数的4%。在部署期间经历爆炸伤以及接触杀戮和死亡已被证明会增加自杀风险。尽管对军人群体的多项研究调查了烧伤患者急性期死亡的风险因素,但尚无研究报告死亡率、死因或出院后自杀的发生率。本研究调查了2003年3月7日至2013年3月6日期间从美国国防部唯一的烧伤中心出院的830名战斗烧伤患者的病死率、死因和自杀发生率。死因通过武装部队法医办公室和国防部长办公室的国家死亡指数确定。830名烧伤幸存者中共有11人死亡,总病死率为1.3%。在死亡的11人中,5人死于药物中毒意外;3人死于战争行动(2人返回战区后),其余3人死于其他意外原因(1人爆炸和2人车祸)。本研究纳入的既往患者中没有自杀迹象或自杀嫌疑作为死因,这表明在我们的研究人群中,战斗烧伤似乎并未增加自杀死亡风险。需要进一步研究以了解促成战斗烧伤幸存者明显恢复力的因素。