FIREWORK RELATED BURN INJURIES IN AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND: A REVIEW OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND CLINICAL OUTCOMES


Jason Diab1, Vanessa Diab3, Peter Maitz1,2, Andrea Issler-Fisher1,2,
1Concord Hospital NSW, Australia
2University of Sydney NSW, Australia
3University of New South Wales NSW, Australia

Abstract

Introduction:
Fireworks are commonly used to celebrate holidays and events with potential to impact livelihoods from blast injuries. This study aims to describe and analyse firework related burns in adults across Australia and New Zealand (AUSNZ).
Methods:
A retrospective review from January 2010 – January 2022 across all adult burns units (AUSNZ). All firework related burn injuries in adults greater than 18 years that attended or were referred to the Burns Units were included.
Results:
There were 173 patients with a firework related burn injury. The male to female ratio was 4.4:1 with the majority representing a younger age group (mean=34.2 years, range: 18-45). Men were significantly more likely to have firework related injuries at home and /or outside than women (49.3% vs 24.2%, p=0.009). There were 29 firecrackers, 44 sparklers, and 99 firework burn injuries with significant differences in proportions between states for sparklers and fireworks. The mean TBSA was 4.3% with significant differences amongst sex (men 4.7% vs female 2.0%, p=0.042) and amongst states. Adequate first aid was reported higher in men than women (61.4% vs 42.4%, p=0.047). Approximately half the injuries were hands and a third of injuries involved more than one body part. The most frequent type of injury was a full thickness burn (39.6%), followed by mid dermal (24.1%) and superficial (23.0%) respectively. The operative rate was 79.2%. The median LoS was 2.9 days (IQR = 1.0 – 6.9 days).
Conclusions:
Firework related burns have distinct patterns of use and injuries amongst men and women with variations across states. Legislation and prevention are cornerstone to reducing the impact of burn related injuries.

Biography

Jason is a SET surgical trainee with an interest in burn prevention and epidemiology. He has published and presented in national and international burn and surgical platforms.