Sociodemographic determinants for risk exposure of child injuries at home with focus on burns
Author(s) -
Birutė Strukčinskienė,
Neringa Strazdienė,
Robert Bauer,
M Steiner
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
social welfare interdisciplinary approach
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2424-3876
pISSN - 2029-7424
DOI - 10.21277/sw.v1i9.464
Subject(s) - disfigurement , medicine , occupational safety and health , environmental health , injury prevention , poison control , legislation , suicide prevention , focus group , human factors and ergonomics , enforcement , public health , stigma (botany) , nursing , psychiatry , surgery , business , pathology , political science , law , marketing
Burns are a significant public health problem that occurs at home and especially affect children. Non-fatal burn victims suffer from prolonged hospitalization, disfigurement and disability, with consequences of stigma and rejection. The survey on child injuries at home with focus on burns showed that sociodemographic determinants play an important role for child safety at home. The majority of home injuries were attributable to human and environmental factors. The main ways for prevention, including education, safe environment creation, legislation and enforcement can prevent child injuries (including burns or scalds) and promote safety at home, saving the lives of vulnerable age groups, especially children.
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