pubmed-article:15774292 | pubmed:abstractText | Severe burns in children can result in prolonged suffering, disability, disfigurement, and in impaired physical and mental development. Hospitalization rates of children with burns are much higher than for children with other trauma. Therefore, various child burn prevention programs have been implemented, but their efficacy has been evaluated only by assessment of knowledge or satisfaction rather than evaluating actual changes in burn-related hospitalizations. Our objective was to map Israeli child burn prevention programs and to measure their success from the rate of burn-related hospitalizations. | lld:pubmed |