Burn Injuries Associated with Wars and Disasters
A special issue of European Burn Journal (ISSN 2673-1991).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 March 2024) | Viewed by 21237
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Over the last century, the advances in burn care owe much to the experience gained during wars and mass-casualty disasters, specifically, how these events sparked collaboration between military and civilian burn communities. Examples abound. Frank P. Underhill developed a theory of burn shock following the Rialto Theater fire of 1921 [1] based on his observations on the pathophysiology of war gases during WWI [2]. The attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, which caused hundreds of thermal injuries, spurred research and training in burns at Boston hospitals by the time of the Cocoanut Grove Night Club fire of 1942 [3]. The threat of nuclear war with the Soviet Union led to the founding of the second burn center in the US in 1949 at Fort Sam Houston, TX, from which stemmed numerous improvements in care for civilian and military patients [4]. This Special Issue of the European Burn Journal covers topics in burn care from a military and disaster perspective, focusing on the potential challenges of large-scale combat operations. It is not clear that the world is safer today than during the above-mentioned events. However, certainly, future conflicts and mass-casualty events will again evoke the best efforts of multidisciplinary burn teams.
- Underhill, F.P. The significance of anhydremia in extensive superficial burns. JAMA 1930, 95, 852–857.
- Underhill, F.P. The physiology and experimental treatment of poisoning with the lethal war gases. Archives of Internal Medicine 1919, 23, 753–770.
- Aub, J.C.; Beecher, H.K.; Cannon, B.; Cobb, S.; Cope, O.; Faxon, N.W.; Lyons, C.; Mallory, T.; Schatzki, R. Management of the Cocoanut Grove Burns at the Massachusetts General Hospital; J.B. Lippincott: Philadelphia, PA, USA, 1943.
- Pruitt, B.A., Jr. Combat casualty care and surgical progress. Annals of Surgery 2006, 243, 715–729.
Dr. Leopoldo C. Cancio
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- burns
- military personnel
- disaster medicine
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