Background: This study assessed 10-year changes in the proportion and epidemiology of work-related burns among inpatients at a single institution; as an institutional proportion, results reflect within-center surveillance.Methods: Burn inpatients admitted in 2016–2025 (n=5,074), including work-related burns (n=535), were retrospectively reviewed. Annual proportions were calculated. Because proportions dropped during COVID-19 (2020–2022), these years were excluded from the primary trend analysis. Period differences were tested with two-proportion tests and an overall 2×3 chi-square test; trends excluding 2020–2022 were evaluated with linear regression.Results: Work-related burns accounted for 10.5% (535/5,074). The proportion decreased in 2020–2022 versus 2016–2019 (7.7% vs. 10.9%; P=0.002) and increased in 2023–2025 versus 2020–2022 (13.1% vs. 7.7%; P<0.001); overall period differences were significant (chi-square P<0.001). Excluding 2020–2022, the proportion increased by +0.34 percentage points/year (95% confidence interval, 0.05–0.63; P=0.029). Scalds (53.6%) and electrical burns (18.5%) predominated. Mean burn total body surface area (TBSA) was 5.9%±9.2%, with 83.7% <10% TBSA; 78.9% were second-degree burns. Surgery was performed in 292 (54.6%), most commonly split-thickness skin grafting (STSG; n=150) or STSG with acellular dermal matrix (n=92). The highest incidence occurred in summer (33.3%).Conclusion: After excluding 2020–2022, the institutional proportion of work-related burns increased over time despite declining total burn admissions. This reflects a relative shift in case-mix, not population-level incidence; explanations such as changing exposures or improved reporting/compensation are hypothesis-generating.
Jung et al. (Fri,) studied this question.