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CRITERIA FOR TRANSFER TO BURN CENTER

The American Burn Association and American College of Surgeons has identified the following types of burn injuries that usually require referral to a burn center:

  1. Partial-thickness and full-thickness burns greater than 10% of the total body surface area (BSA) in patients under 10 years or over 50 years of age. 
  2. Partial-thickness and full-thickness burns greater than 20% BSA in other age groups.
  3. Partial-thickness and full-thickness burns involving the face, eyes, ears, hands, feet, genitalia, or perineum or those that involve skin overlying major joints.
  4. Full-thickness burns greater than 5% BSA in any age group.
  5. Electrical burns, including lightning injury (significant volumes of tissue beneath the surface may be injured and result in acute renal failure and other complications).
  6. Significant chemical burns.
  7. Inhalation injury.
  8. Burn injury in patients with pre-existing illness that could complicate management, prolong recovery, or affect mortality.
  9. Any burn patient in whom concomitant trauma poses an increased risk or morbidity or mortality may be treated initially in a trauma center until stable before transfer to a burn center.
  10. Children with burns seen in hospitals without qualified personnel or equipment for their care should be transferred to a burn center with these capabilities.
  11. Burn injury in patients who will require special social and emotional or long-term rehabilitative support, including cases involving suspected child abuse and neglect.

TRANSFER PROCEDURE

  1. Transfer of any patient must be coordinated with the burn-center physician. 

  2. All pertinent information regarding tests, temperature, pulse, fluids administered, and urinary output should be recorded on the burn/trauma flow sheet and sent with the patient. Any other information deemed important by the referring or receiving physician also is sent with the patient.

 

 


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