ABSTRACT
Advances in burn care are well documented in the literature but often do not reach health care professionals who treat burn patients. The World Wide Web provides instant access to a wide variety of information globally. We describe the development of www.burnsurgery.org, a nonprofit Web site dedicated to the education of burn care professionals. Internet-based medical education is becoming a dominant method of information transfer and we believe that it will help to standardize and improve burn care throughout the world.
Subject(s)
Burns , Diffusion of Innovation , Education, Distance , Education, Medical, Continuing/methods , Internet/organization & administration , Medical Informatics/methods , Burns/therapy , Health Services , Humans , Massachusetts , Medical Informatics/standards , Quality of Health Care , United StatesABSTRACT
Estimates of percent body surface area (%BSA) burns correlate well with fluid needs, nutritional requirements, and prognosis. Most burn centers rely on the Lund Browder chart and "rule of nines," to calculate the %BSA. Computer-based methods may improve precision and data analysis. We studied two new methods of determining %BSA: a two-dimensional Web-based program (Sage II) and a three-dimensional computer-aided design program (EPRI 3D Burn Vision). Members of our burn team found the Sage II program easy to use and found many of the features useful for patient care. The EPRI program has the advantage of 3D images and different body morphologies but required training to use. Computer-aided methods offer the potential for improved precision and data analysis of %BSA measurements.