Proclamation 5592 --
National Burn Awareness Week, 1987
By
the President of the United States of America
A
Proclamation
Burns
continue to be one of the leading causes of accidental death and injury in our
Nation. Each year, burns kill approximately 12,000 Americans and injure more
than two million, of whom 70,000 need hospitalization. Tragically, children,
the elderly, and the disabled are especially vulnerable to burn injuries, and
almost one-third of all burn victims are under age 15. Further, survivors may
experience serious scarring, loss of muscle tissue over joints, and
accompanying physical disabilities and adjustment difficulties.
Thankfully,
significant research advances have improved burn surgery and treatment, aided
rehabilitation, shortened hospital stays, and much increased the burn survival
rate. Among the most important therapeutic advances are techniques for early
burn excision and wound closure, the development of artificial skin to cover
large burn areas, better ways to prevent and control infection, and improved
ways to restore fluid balance and provide adequate nutrition.
Much
remains to be learned, however, about the body's underlying responses to burn
injury -- for instance, the body's infection-fighting system, factors leading
to tissue breakdown and energy loss, hormonal changes, and the life-threatening
effects of shock.
The
best approach to burn injury, of course, is prevention. Because a great number
of burns could be prevented, there is a great need for national attention to
all aspects of burn prevention.
We
can all be truly grateful to the many Americans who devote themselves to
treating, caring for, and rehabilitating burn victims; to all those involved in
the vital work of burn research; to the dedicated fire fighters who risk their
own lives daily to protect others; and to everyone who promotes burn awareness
and prevention.
The
Congress, by Public Law 99 - 538, has designated the week of February 9 through
February 15, 1987, as ``National Burn Awareness Week'' and authorized and
requested the President to issue a proclamation in observance of this event.
Now,
Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the
In
Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this eighteenth day of December,
in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-six, and of the
Ronald
Reagan
[Filed
with the Office of the Federal Register,
Note:
The proclamation was released by the Office of the Press Secretary on December
19.