EMT Burn Management: Part 2
Burn Assessment and Treatment: Making The Call
In our first installment, we looked at how to determine the thickness of a burn and what that might mean for the patient. Now let’s talk about the things that will help us decide how to determine if our patient’s burn is minor, moderate of severe.
Our three considerations when deciding on burn criteria are:
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burn depth,
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burn surface area
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burn location.
We covered burn depth last time, this time we’ll cover estimating burn area and the particular locations that change our burn assessment.
Estimating Burn Surface Area
Let’s look at two widely accepted guidelines for estimating the surface area of a burn. For smaller burns, the palm method can be useful. Look at the palm of your patient’s hand. The surface area of the palm (we’re not including the fingers here) is about 1% of the patients total body surface area. This can be useful if the burn involves 15% or less of the total body surface area.
Another rapid estimation tool is the rule of nines. This rule requires a bit of memorization on your part, but the effort is well worth it. In the rule of nines we divide major body regions into percentages. The head is 9%. The chest and back are both 18% respectively. Each leg is also 18%. Each arm is given 9% and the genitalia add the remaining 1% to total body area. From that foundation, large area burns can be estimated rapidly. One half of one arm is a 4.5% total body surface area burn (TBSA). One entire leg and the front of the other leg is a 27% TBSA burn.
For complex burn patterns, the two rules can be used together as well.
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