Epidemiology of chronic cutaneous wounds in China

ABSTRACT Chronic cutaneous wounds represent a major health care burden in China. However, limited information exists regarding the epidemiologic changes associated with recent social and economic development. We designed a cross‐sectional survey in 2,513 patients who underwent treatment of chronic c...

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Published inWound repair and regeneration Vol. 19; no. 2; pp. 181 - 188
Main Authors Jiang, Yufeng, Huang, Sha, Fu, Xiaobing, Liu, Hongwei, Ran, Xingwu, Lu, Shuliang, Hu, Dahai, Li, Qiang, Zhang, Hongwei, Li, Ying, Wang, Runxiu, Xie, Ting, Cheng, Biao, Wang, Lingfeng, Liu, Yi, Ye, Xiangbai, Han, Chunmao, Chen, Huade
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Malden, USA Blackwell Publishing Inc 01.03.2011
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Summary:ABSTRACT Chronic cutaneous wounds represent a major health care burden in China. However, limited information exists regarding the epidemiologic changes associated with recent social and economic development. We designed a cross‐sectional survey in 2,513 patients who underwent treatment of chronic cutaneous wounds from a nationally representative sample in 17 hospitals between 2007 and 2008. Results revealed the prevalence of chronic cutaneous wounds among hospitalized patients was 1.7‰. Patient ages ranged from 18 days to 96 years (median, 58 years). The highest ratios were among 40–60 and 60–80‐year‐old patients (31% and 38%, respectively). The leading causes of chronic cutaneous wounds were diabetes (31.3% men, 35.3% women) trauma (26.4% men, 19.2% women). Manual workers (38.5% men, 29.3% women) and retirees (27.9% men, 23.5% women) accounted for over half the chronic cutaneous wound patients. Regarding treatments, only 22.4% were treated with modern dressings or other novel technologies and more patients received antibiotics (77.8%). Treatment was paid for by the patients in 42.3% of cases, by social medical insurance in 25.0%, by commercial medical insurance in 4.8%, while 27.9% received free medical care. Approximately half the patients' wounds were completely healed at discharge (1,345/2,513). In conclusion, diabetes has recently become the leading cause of chronic cutaneous wounds in China. The large population and considerable financial burden mean that serious attention should be paid to the early detection, prevention and diagnosis of chronic cutaneous wounds, and suggest that an overall health insurance system should be established, especially for the elderly.
Bibliography:istex:D5EEBCBEB7E6C0020968D53260FCB7D61B74D470
ark:/67375/WNG-W699QNBM-J
ArticleID:WRR666
Contributed equally.
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ISSN:1067-1927
1524-475X
DOI:10.1111/j.1524-475X.2010.00666.x