Authors
Dalbir Singh, Amarjit Singh, Aditya K Sharma, Lavina Sodhi
Publication date
1998/3/1
Journal
Burns
Volume
24
Issue
2
Pages
150-156
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
An analysis of autopsy records of burn victims revealed that most burn deaths occurred in the age group 21–40 years (67 per cent) with female preponderance (61 per cent) in all age groups except in the extreme age groups. 62 per cent of burn cases originated in urban areas. The majority of subjects (99 per cent females and 76 per cent males) died as a result of flame burns. Kerosene was the most common factor (76 per cent) in burn deaths. 11 per cent of deaths were due to the stove bursting and 27 per cent of victims died due to leakage of oil from the stove, 39 per cent of subjects sustained burns when their clothes caught fire. Scalds (3.3 per cent), electrical (4.7 per cent) and chemical (2.3 per cent) burns were more commonly seen in males, mainly sustained at their working place. Accidental burns were observed in 80 per cent of subjects followed by suicidal (16.2 per cent) and homicidal burn assaults (4.1 …
Total citations
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