Advances in surgical techniques and wound management have improved outcomes for burn patients; however, the psychological impacts on burn survivors have had less attention. There is a higher rate of mental health disorders amongst burns victims, with those with pre-existing mental health conditions likely to have worse outcomes. To implement effective burns care and rehabilitation, knowledge and understanding of mental health issues is required. This position paper discusses the extent to which clinicians currently translate knowledge around mental health and burns into practice to identify enables and inhibitors. Successful knowledge translation requires dissemination and accessibility of information with the capacity and readiness for change. Clinicians and researchers need to identify how translating research to practice can meet the needs of burn survivors. There is a gap in the utilization of evidence concerning mental health and the needs of burns survivors, and we need to understand what we know as compared to what we do. Clinicians are well placed to determine how and why knowledge does not necessarily translate to practice and how they can better accommodate the needs of burn survivors.
Funding
University of Tasmania
History
Publication title
International Journal of Mental Health Nursing
Volume
27
Issue
6
Pagination
1869-1876
ISSN
1445-8330
Department/School
School of Nursing
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia
Place of publication
Australia
Rights statement
Copyright 2018 Australian College of Mental Health Nurses Inc.