Prevalence of risk factors for residential fire and burn injuries in an American Indian community.

Description: 

Fatality rates from residential fires are high among American Indians. Contact burns and scalds are also among the leading types of thermal injuries. Information about the prevalence of risk factors for burn injuries is required to design interventions aimed at reducing residential fire and burn injuries. The authors conducted a survey in July and August 1992 of 68 households located in a small American Indian community in Washington state to ascertain the prevalence of selected risk factors for residential fire and burn injuries. Nearly all households (96%) in the study had a smoke detector, and 95% of those tested were functioning. However, a high prevalence of other household characteristics associated with excess risk of residential fire and burn injuries was identified: 59% of households had at least one member who smoked, 25% had a member who smoked in bed, 38% had a member who drank alcohol and smoked at the same time, 46% used wood burning stoves as a heat source, and 15% of households were mobile homes. Thirteen percent of households had at least one fire during the previous 3 years, and the incidence of burns due to all causes and requiring medical treatment was 1.5 per 100 persons per year. Hot water temperature was measured to determine the potential risk for scald burns, and 48% of households had a maximum hot water temperature of 130 degrees or more Fahrenheit. Such surveys can guide intervention strategies to reduce residential fire and burn injuries in American Indian communities.

Location Description: 

Washington WA