Burns Nursing · GCC Clinical Guide 2025

Burns Nursing in the GCC

Every major GCC country operates a dedicated burns unit. It is one of the most technically demanding and emotionally rewarding specialties in nursing — with specialist-level pay to match. From Hamad Burns Centre in Qatar (top 10 globally) to King Saud Medical City in Riyadh, GCC burns units attract nurses who want to truly master their craft.

Top 10
Hamad Burns Centre, Qatar — globally ranked
40 beds
Hamad dedicated burns unit — largest in MENA
QAR 19K
Top burns ICU nurse salary, Qatar
CWCN
Wound care cert valued in burns nursing

The GCC Burns Landscape

Burns incidence in the GCC is driven by a unique combination of industrial, cultural, and environmental factors that create sustained demand for specialist burns nurses across the region.

High Risk
Industrial & petrochemical burns.
The GCC's vast oil, gas, and construction industries generate significant occupational burn injuries. Electrical burns are common on construction sites, while petrochemical plant accidents produce complex chemical and flame burns requiring specialist care.
Occupational Hazard
Very Common
Kitchen and domestic burns.
Open-fire cooking, Bunsen-style burners, and hot liquids in busy multi-family households contribute heavily. Scalds from hot tea, coffee, and cooking liquids are the most frequent mechanism in paediatric burns — seen daily in every GCC burns unit.
Domestic Risk
Unique Factor
Synthetic clothing ignition.
The extreme GCC heat means loose synthetic fabrics are widely worn. These ignite rapidly on contact with flame, producing extensive flame burns that are disproportionate to the initial exposure. Abaya fabric fires are a documented pattern in GCC burns units.
GCC-Specific

Major Burns Centres Across the GCC

🇸🇦
King Saud Medical City Burns Unit
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
One of Saudi Arabia's primary burns referral centres, handling complex burns from across the central region. Multi-disciplinary team includes plastic surgeons, burns nurses, physiotherapists, and psychologists. Major employer of international burns nurses.
🇸🇦
Hail Region Burns Centre
Hail, Saudi Arabia
Regional burns centre serving the northern Saudi interior. Burns from agricultural and construction injuries are common. Provides specialist cover across a large geographic region, making it a busy and varied unit with good nursing development opportunities.
🇶🇦
Hamad Burns Centre
Hamad Medical City, Doha, Qatar
Most advanced burns centre in MENA. 40-bed dedicated unit, ranked in the global top 10. Provides the full spectrum of burns care from acute resuscitation through to rehabilitation. Runs advanced skin grafting, reconstructive surgery, and scar management programmes. Excellent nursing development and specialist training.
🇦🇪
Sheikh Khalifa Medical City Burns Unit
Abu Dhabi, UAE
Abu Dhabi's principal burns referral centre. Managed by SEHA Health System with strong links to UK and US burns protocols. Handles major flame burns, chemical injuries, and electrical burns from Abu Dhabi's large construction and industrial workforce.
🇦🇪
Rashid Hospital Burns Unit
Dubai, UAE
Dubai's major trauma centre with a dedicated burns unit. Receives major burn casualties from across the emirate including industrial, domestic, and road-traffic-related burns. Integrated with Rashid's trauma and plastics surgery departments — a high-acuity environment.
🇰🇼
Al-Babtain Centre for Burns & Plastic Surgery
Kuwait City, Kuwait
Kuwait's specialist burns and plastic surgery referral centre, covering the most complex cases nationally. Provides both acute burns management and long-term reconstructive surgery and scar rehabilitation — a full-spectrum burns nursing career pathway.
⚗️
Chemical Burns: GCC burns units also manage chemical burns from industrial workers in the petrochemical and construction sectors. Acid attacks, while uncommon, are seen occasionally. Chemical burns require specific decontamination protocols and may have delayed depth presentations — a key assessment challenge for burns nurses.

Burns Assessment

Accurate burns assessment is the foundation of all subsequent management. Two key tools — Rule of Nines and Lund & Browder — together with burns depth classification determine resuscitation, surgery, and prognosis.

Rule of Nines — Adult TBSA

The Rule of Nines divides the adult body into regions each representing 9% (or multiples) of Total Body Surface Area. It is fast to apply at the bedside and in the emergency setting — ideal for initial triage and early Parkland formula calculation.

Head & Neck9%
Right Arm9%
Left Arm9%
Anterior Trunk18%
Posterior Trunk18%
Right Leg18%
Left Leg18%
Perineum1%
Total100%
9% Ant 18% 9% 9% 1% 18% 18% * Posterior trunk +18%
💡
Palm rule: The patient's palm (including fingers) = approximately 1% TBSA. Useful for patchy or irregular burns.

Lund & Browder Chart

The Lund & Browder chart is more accurate than the Rule of Nines because it accounts for age-related differences in body proportions. Children have proportionally larger heads and smaller legs — the Rule of Nines significantly overestimates TBSA in children if unadjusted.

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Key principle: The head of a newborn represents approximately 19% TBSA. This decreases by ~1% per year until adulthood (9%). Correspondingly, each thigh increases from 5.5% at birth toward the adult 9% per leg. Always use Lund & Browder for any patient under 15 years old.
👶
Paediatric rule: In GCC burns units, where paediatric scalds are extremely common, Lund & Browder is the mandatory assessment tool for all children. Overestimating TBSA leads to over-resuscitation and pulmonary oedema; underestimating leads to shock.
Body Area 0–1yr 1–4yr 5–9yr 10–14yr Adult
Head19%17%13%11%9%
Neck2%2%2%2%2%
Anterior Trunk13%13%13%13%13%
Posterior Trunk13%13%13%13%13%
Right/Left Upper Arm4% ea4% ea4% ea4% ea4% ea
Right/Left Forearm3% ea3% ea3% ea3% ea3% ea
Right/Left Hand2.5%2.5%2.5%2.5%2.5%
Right/Left Thigh5.5%6.5%8%8.5%9.5%
Right/Left Leg (lower)5%5%5.5%6%7%
Right/Left Foot3.5%3.5%3.5%3.5%3.5%

Burns Depth Classification

Burns depth determines healing potential, need for surgical grafting, pain levels, and long-term scarring. Accurate depth assessment at 48–72 hours (when initial oedema settles) is more reliable than immediate post-injury assessment.

Superficial
1st Degree
Epidermis only — no blisters, dry, red, very painful.
Prototype: sunburn. Skin intact, painful to touch, heals in 3–5 days without treatment. Not included in TBSA calculation for resuscitation purposes. Topical moisturiser and analgesia sufficient. In GCC context, sunburn from outdoor workers is a common minor presentation.
Superficial Partial
2nd Degree
Into superficial dermis — blisters, wet, pink/red, extremely painful.
Blisters form as plasma leaks into the subepidermal space. Intense pain due to exposed nerve endings. Usually heals within 14 days without grafting if kept clean. Most common type from scalds (hot liquids). Flamazine or Mepitel One commonly used in GCC units. Pain management is the major nursing challenge.
Deep Partial
2nd Degree
Deep dermis — white/red mottled, reduced pain, blotchy appearance.
Nerve endings partially destroyed — less painful than superficial partial thickness despite being deeper. Takes 3–9 weeks to heal; high risk of hypertrophic scarring. Most deep partial thickness burns will require skin grafting. Key nursing role: regular reassessment as depth can evolve in first 48–72 hours, especially with infection.
Full Thickness
3rd Degree
All skin layers destroyed — painless, white/brown/black, leathery.
Complete destruction of dermis and its appendages. Wound is dry, inelastic, painless (nerve destruction). Cannot heal spontaneously — requires surgical excision and skin grafting. Common after flame burns, prolonged contact burns, and electrical injuries. Eschar formation with circumferential burns risks compartment syndrome requiring escharotomy.
4th Degree
Extends to bone, tendon, or muscle — major reconstructive surgery required.
Seen in high-voltage electrical burns, prolonged flame burns, and crush-burn injuries. Amputation may be necessary. Complex multi-disciplinary management. Nursing care focuses on preventing sepsis, supporting nutrition, managing associated systemic injuries, and psychological support for devastating outcomes.
⚠️
Depth evolution: Burns can "convert" from partial to full thickness in the first 48–72 hours due to infection, poor perfusion, or desiccation. Daily reassessment is essential. A wound that looked superficial partial thickness on day 1 may require grafting by day 3. Document changes meticulously.
TBSA Calculator — Rule of Nines (Adult)
Select burned body regions, enter patient weight, and calculate estimated fluid resuscitation using the Parkland formula.

Select burned regions (click to select/deselect):

Head & Neck
9% TBSA
Right Arm
9% TBSA
Left Arm
9% TBSA
Anterior Trunk
18% TBSA
Posterior Trunk
18% TBSA
Right Leg
18% TBSA
Left Leg
18% TBSA
Perineum
1% TBSA
Total TBSA Burned
Severity Classification
Total Parkland Fluid (24h)

Parkland Formula — Nursing Implementation

⚠️
Clinical note: This calculator is for educational and reference purposes. All fluid calculations must be verified by the attending physician and titrated to clinical response — particularly urine output (target 0.5–1 ml/kg/hr). Time-zero for Parkland formula is time of burn, not time of arrival.

Burns Resuscitation

The first 24–48 hours after a major burn are dominated by fluid management. Burns nurses must understand the physiology, the formulas, and the clinical endpoints — and be confident titrating care accordingly.

💧 Parkland Formula — Nursing Implementation +

The Parkland formula remains the international standard for burns fluid resuscitation: 4 ml × weight (kg) × % TBSA = total volume in first 24 hours (Hartmann's/Lactated Ringer's solution).

Nursing fluid rate calculation:

  • First 8 hours from time of burn: Give 50% of total 24-hour volume. Note — this is from time of burn, not time of admission. If a patient arrives 3 hours post-burn, the remaining 5 hours of the first 8-hour window will require a higher hourly rate to deliver the 50% on time.
  • Next 16 hours: Give remaining 50% of total volume at an even rate.
  • Example — 70 kg patient, 30% TBSA: Total = 4 × 70 × 30 = 8,400 ml. First 8 hours: 4,200 ml = 525 ml/hr. Next 16 hours: 4,200 ml = 262.5 ml/hr.
  • Day 2 fluids: Colloid (albumin) often introduced on day 2 as capillary integrity begins to restore. Calculated separately — typically 0.3–0.5 ml/kg/% TBSA.

Critical nursing points:

  • Large bore IV access (two peripheral IVs or central line) — through non-burned skin if possible, through burned skin if necessary in major burns.
  • Urinary catheter with hourly urine measurement is mandatory in any burn requiring resuscitation. This is your primary clinical endpoint.
  • Weigh the patient on admission — burns resuscitation is weight-dependent. Estimated weights are unreliable in major burns.
  • Document actual volumes given vs prescribed volumes every hour. Alert the medical team if you cannot meet the target rate or if clinical parameters deteriorate.
🔬 Urine Output Titration +

Urine output is the primary clinical endpoint of burns resuscitation — more reliable than blood pressure or heart rate in isolation.

  • Target urine output (adults): 0.5–1 ml/kg/hr (approximately 30–50 ml/hr in a 60 kg adult).
  • Urine output too low (<0.5 ml/kg/hr): Increase fluid rate by 20–30% and reassess in 1 hour. Document and notify medical team if not responding.
  • Urine output too high (>1 ml/kg/hr): Decrease fluid rate by 20–30%. Over-resuscitation causes pulmonary oedema, abdominal compartment syndrome, worsening oedema, and conversion of partial thickness burns to full thickness.
  • Haemoglobinuria / myoglobinuria: Dark brown/red urine indicates electrical burn or major crush component. Target higher urine output (1–1.5 ml/kg/hr) and consider sodium bicarbonate to alkalinise urine — prevents renal tubular damage from myoglobin precipitation.
  • Children: Target 1 ml/kg/hr. Hypoglycaemia is a specific risk in children during burns resuscitation — include 5% dextrose maintenance alongside the Parkland fluid.
💊 Opioid Pain Management in Acute Burns +

Pain in burns is multidimensional: background pain, procedural pain (dressing changes), and breakthrough pain. Each requires a different approach.

Background analgesia:

  • IV morphine titration: Start with IV morphine 0.1 mg/kg and titrate. Continuous infusion with PCA (patient controlled analgesia) is used in many GCC burns ICU settings for major burns.
  • Regular paracetamol (IV in ICU patients) and NSAIDs (if no contraindications) provide opioid-sparing baseline analgesia.

Procedural analgesia — dressing changes:

  • Ketamine: Highly popular in GCC burns units for dressing changes. Provides profound analgesia and dissociation, maintaining airway reflexes and haemodynamic stability. Sub-anaesthetic dose IV (0.5–1 mg/kg) administered 5 minutes before procedure. Nurse's role: monitoring, prepared airway equipment, reassurance through emergence.
  • Entonox (nitrous oxide): Used in some centres for procedural pain — nurse-administered, fast onset and offset.
  • Intranasal fentanyl: Increasingly used in GCC paediatric burns for dressing changes — effective, needle-free.
  • Oral opioids: For moderate ongoing pain in recovering patients — oxycodone or tramadol are commonly prescribed in GCC burns wards.

Nursing considerations:

  • Pre-medicate 30–60 minutes before dressing changes (oral medications). For IV ketamine, timing is at procedure start.
  • Assess pain using validated tool (NRS, Wong-Baker Faces in children) before and after every dressing change — document in notes.
  • Psychological preparation and distraction techniques (especially in children) are as important as pharmacological analgesia.
🫁 Airway Burns — Inhalation Injury +

Inhalation injury is present in approximately 20–35% of hospitalised burn patients and significantly increases mortality. Airway oedema progresses rapidly — early recognition and intervention is critical.

Clinical signs of inhalation injury — assess on arrival:

  • Singed nasal hair and eyebrows — direct heat exposure to face
  • Hoarse voice / voice changes — supraglottic oedema developing
  • Facial burns and perioral burns — high-risk association
  • Soot in the nostrils, mouth, or sputum
  • Stridor — late and very concerning sign; oedema is advanced
  • History of being in an enclosed space fire
  • Carbonaceous sputum

Nursing action:

  • Alert senior medical staff and anaesthetics immediately — do not wait for stridor to develop.
  • High-flow 100% oxygen via non-rebreather mask — also treats carbon monoxide poisoning (common in enclosed-space fires).
  • Early intubation is safer than delayed intubation: as oedema progresses, the airway narrows rapidly. Intubating an oedematous airway is far more dangerous than elective early intubation.
  • Prepare intubation trolley, RSI medications, surgical airway equipment — be ready before oedema is established.
  • Document carboxyhaemoglobin level from ABG on admission.
✂️ Escharotomy — Nursing Role +

Full-thickness circumferential burns create a rigid, inelastic eschar. As underlying oedema increases with resuscitation, compartment syndrome develops. Escharotomy (surgical release incisions through the eschar) is a limb and life-saving procedure.

Sites at risk:

  • Circumferential limb burns — arms, legs, digits
  • Circumferential chest burns — restricts chest wall expansion, causes ventilatory failure
  • Circumferential abdominal burns — abdominal compartment syndrome

Nursing recognition of compartment syndrome:

  • 6 Ps: Pain (if any neurological function remaining), Pressure (tense swelling), Paralysis, Paraesthesia, Pallor, Pulselessness (late sign)
  • Monitor hourly: capillary refill, pulse oximetry on affected digits, compartment pressure (if measured), limb colour
  • Loss of palpable Doppler signal in limb = emergency — alert surgical team immediately
  • Chest burns: monitor ventilator peak pressures — rising pressures suggest thoracic compartment syndrome

Nursing role in escharotomy:

  • Alert surgical team at first sign of vascular compromise — do not delay
  • Prepare theatre or bedside surgical pack — escharotomy can be performed at the bedside in an emergency
  • Post-escharotomy: significant bleeding from wounds — have haemostatic agents, electrocautery available
  • Document pre- and post-procedure limb assessments thoroughly

Wound Care in Burns

Burns wound management is a specialty in itself. Dressing selection, change technique, infection surveillance, and hydrotherapy are core nursing competencies that directly affect healing outcomes.

🔬
Clean vs sterile technique: Most modern burns centres — including GCC units — use clean technique (non-sterile gloves, clean environment) for routine non-operative dressing changes. Sterile technique is reserved for surgical grafting, donor sites, and newly grafted areas. The evidence base supports clean technique for established wounds as it is equally effective and more practical for large wound surface areas.

Burns Dressing Products Used in GCC Units

🧴
Silver Sulfadiazine (Flamazine)
Antimicrobial cream
Still widely used across GCC burns units, particularly in Saudi Arabia. Broad-spectrum antimicrobial action including Pseudomonas. Applied directly to wound, covered with secondary dressing. Requires daily changes. Can inhibit re-epithelialisation if overused on superficial wounds — trend toward more modern alternatives in progressive units.
🩹
Mepitel One
Silicone non-adherent layer
Soft silicone wound contact layer that does not adhere to the wound bed. Ideal for partial thickness burns — reduces pain on removal dramatically. Can remain in place for several days while secondary absorbent dressing is changed. Widely used at Hamad Burns Centre and progressive UAE units.
💧
Mepilex Ag
Silver foam dressing
Silver-containing soft foam dressing combining antimicrobial protection with absorbency. Suitable for moderate-to-heavily exuding partial thickness burns. Soft silicone backing reduces adherence. Can stay in place 3–5 days in appropriate wounds, reducing the frequency and pain of dressing changes.
🌊
Aquacel Ag (Hydrofibre)
Silver hydrofibre dressing
Hydrofibre dressing with ionic silver. Highly absorbent — forms a gel on contact with exudate, maintaining moist wound environment. Particularly useful for moderate burns with heavy exudate. Can remain in place for up to 14 days in appropriate wounds. Evidence-based choice for partial thickness burns in several GCC centre protocols.
🧬
Biobrane
Biosynthetic skin substitute
Biosynthetic dressing composed of silicone film + nylon mesh coated with porcine collagen. Applied to clean partial thickness burns — acts as temporary skin substitute, reducing pain and fluid loss while wound re-epithelialises underneath. Not used where infection is present. Requires careful application and monitoring.
🔬
Skin Substitutes (Integra, Alloderm)
Dermal regeneration matrix
Used in major full thickness burns where sufficient donor skin is unavailable. Integra (bovine collagen + shark chondroitin) provides a dermal scaffold that vascularises over 3 weeks, then receives a thin split-skin graft. Available at top-tier GCC centres including Hamad. Nursing role: meticulous wound monitoring, infection prevention, dressing changes per protocol.

Dressing Change Procedure

STEP 1 — Pre-medication
Administer prescribed analgesia 30–60 minutes before the procedure (oral opioid/intranasal fentanyl for children). For major changes, IV ketamine as prescribed. Assess pain score before commencing.
STEP 2 — Environment preparation
Warm the room to 28–30°C to prevent hypothermia from exposed large wound surfaces. Prepare all equipment before removing any dressings — minimise time the wound is open. Hydrotherapy trolley if in-shower technique is used.
STEP 3 — Removal
Remove outer dressings gently. Soak adherent dressings with normal saline rather than pulling — prevents re-injury. Mepitel/silicone layers should lift cleanly if used correctly. Never forcibly remove adherent material.
STEP 4 — Wound assessment
Measure wound size (length × width), assess depth changes, colour, exudate type and amount, odour, surrounding skin, signs of epithelialisation or deterioration. Photograph if local protocol. Document thoroughly — this drives clinical decisions.
STEP 5 — Cleansing
Clean wound with warmed normal saline or prescribed antiseptic wash (chlorhexidine 0.05% solution used in many GCC units). Gentle technique — avoid damaging fragile new epithelium. Hydrotherapy shower trolley for major burns.
STEP 6 — New dressing application
Apply prescribed dressing according to wound characteristics. Secure without constriction. Assess limb perfusion post-dressing. Document next planned dressing change date. Post-procedure pain assessment and documentation.
🦠
Infection recognition in burns: Burns wounds are highly susceptible to infection. Key signs: wound becomes black or has new areas of necrosis, offensive malodour, patient temperature spikes, tachycardia disproportionate to other findings, wound culture positive for pathogens. Pseudomonas aeruginosa is the most common pathogen in GCC burns units — produces distinctive blue-green pigment and sweet/musty odour. Requires aggressive systemic antibiotics and wound management. Staphylococcus aureus and MRSA also commonly encountered. Report any infection signs immediately.

Burns Nutrition

Major burns create the most hypermetabolic state encountered in clinical medicine. Nutritional support is not optional — it is core burns treatment, directly affecting wound healing, infection resistance, and survival.

2× Normal
Hypermetabolism.
Major burns increase metabolic rate to approximately double normal baseline. This is driven by catecholamine and cortisol surge, fever, and the massive energy demand of wound healing and immune function. Without aggressive nutritional support, patients catabolise their own muscle mass within days.
Hypermetabolic State
5,000 kcal
Caloric requirement (major burns).
Up to 5,000 kcal/day may be required for major burns (>40% TBSA). Calculated by Curreri formula (25 kcal/kg + 40 kcal/% TBSA per day) or, most accurately, by indirect calorimetry where available. GCC burns centres increasingly use indirect calorimetry for precision.
Nutritional Target
🥗 Early Enteral Nutrition Protocol +
  • Start within 6 hours of major burn: Early enteral nutrition within 6 hours reduces gut mucosal atrophy, preserves the gut barrier (prevents bacterial translocation), and reduces the hypermetabolic response. This is now the standard of care in all GCC burns centres.
  • Nasogastric feeding is mandatory for major burns — patients cannot meet caloric needs orally and are frequently nil-by-mouth for operative procedures.
  • Continuous feeding: 24-hour continuous NG feeds are used in ICU patients. Rate increases are titrated to tolerance (gastric residual volumes, abdominal distension).
  • Burns patients frequently have multiple surgical procedures (grafting, debridement) — coordinate with surgical and anaesthetic teams for NBM periods, restart feeds promptly post-operatively.
  • Nurse role: NG tube placement verification, feed rate management, monitoring gastric residuals, oral care (prevents aspiration risk).
🧬 Micronutrients and GCC-Specific Considerations +
  • Protein: 1.5–2.5 g/kg/day. Wound healing consumes enormous amounts of protein. Burns patients require 2–3 times normal protein intake. Monitor serum albumin and prealbumin as markers of nutritional status (though acute phase reactants in the first weeks post-burn reduce accuracy).
  • Zinc: Essential cofactor for wound healing enzymes. Depleted in burns. Supplement 50 mg elemental zinc/day until wound closure.
  • Vitamin C (ascorbic acid): Critical for collagen synthesis. 1g–2g/day supplementation standard in many burns protocols.
  • Selenium and copper: Antioxidant micronutrients depleted in burns — combined micronutrient supplements (e.g., Cernevit, Tribec) frequently prescribed.
  • Halal requirements in GCC context: All nutritional supplements and enteral feed products must be verified as halal — or at minimum, non-porcine. Many standard feed products use porcine gelatin. Halal-certified alternatives (e.g., Ensure halal range) should be stocked in GCC burns units. Nurses should be aware of this and liaise with the dietitian and family accordingly.

Burns Rehabilitation

Rehabilitation in burns begins on Day 1 of admission, not at discharge. The long-term outcomes for burns patients — physical and psychological — depend enormously on the quality and consistency of early rehabilitation input.

🏋️
Physiotherapy from Day 1
Even in the ICU, passive and active range-of-motion exercises begin on day 1. Burns scar tissue contracts as it heals — without regular movement, contractures form within days. The hands, axillae, neck, and joints are highest risk. Physiotherapists and nurses work together to position patients correctly (anti-contracture positions) and carry out exercises between physio visits.
🧥
Pressure Garments
Custom-made compression garments are the cornerstone of post-burn scar management. Applied once wounds are fully closed (or >80% closed), worn 23 hours per day for 12–24 months. Pressure of approximately 25 mmHg applied by the garment remodels collagen, reduces scar hypertrophy and erythema. GCC burns centres (particularly Hamad) have in-house garment-making workshops.
💆
Scar Management Modalities
Silicone sheets and gel (worn over scars under pressure garments), scar massage, and increasingly laser therapy (fractional CO₂ and pulsed-dye lasers) are available in progressive GCC burns centres including Hamad. Laser therapy significantly improves scar pliability, height, and colour. Combines well with physiotherapy to restore function in contracted areas.
🧠
Psychological impact of burns: Burn injuries carry profound psychological consequences — body image disturbance, PTSD, depression, and anxiety are common. All major burns patients should have psychology team input. In the GCC context, facial burns are particularly devastating — the face carries enormous social and cultural significance in Arab culture. Social interaction, professional respect, and family relationships are all affected. Specialist psychological support and involvement of cultural mediators/social workers is essential. Nurses are often the first to identify psychological distress and should document and escalate concerns.

Paediatric Burns in GCC

Paediatric burns are disproportionately common in the GCC. Scalds are the dominant mechanism — reflecting busy multi-generational households, large extended families, and hot beverages being consumed throughout the day in every GCC culture.

Hot Liquid Scalds — The Dominant Mechanism
Hot water, tea, coffee, and cooking liquids account for the majority of paediatric burns in GCC hospitals. Children in crawling/toddler stage pull containers from low surfaces, or adults accidentally spill hot drinks. The habit of drinking hot tea throughout the day in GCC homes creates a persistent risk. Burns units in Qatar, UAE, and Saudi Arabia all report very high paediatric scald volumes, particularly in spring and summer months.
👮
Child Protection — Non-Accidental Injury
Every burns team member has a child protection responsibility. Some scalds and contact burns in children may indicate non-accidental injury (NAI). Suspicious features include: burns with a clear demarcation line (immersion burns — child held in hot water), bilateral symmetrical burns, burn pattern inconsistent with given history, delay in seeking treatment, previous hospital attendances. The nurse's role is to document history accurately (in the child's words if old enough), note any inconsistencies, and escalate to the senior nurse, burns consultant, and child protection team. In GCC hospitals, this pathway exists — follow it without hesitation.
💧 Paediatric Fluid Management +
  • Modified Parkland (resuscitation) + maintenance: Children require resuscitation fluid AND maintenance fluid (adults do not need maintenance fluid separately during resuscitation). Use Holliday-Segar formula for maintenance: 4 ml/kg/hr for first 10 kg + 2 ml/kg/hr for next 10 kg + 1 ml/kg/hr for each additional kg.
  • Fluid composition: Hartmann's for resuscitation. Use 0.45% sodium chloride + 5% glucose for maintenance to prevent hypoglycaemia.
  • Monitor blood glucose every 1–2 hours in infants and young children — hypoglycaemia is a life-threatening risk during burns resuscitation in paediatric patients.
  • Target urine output: 1 ml/kg/hr (vs 0.5 ml/kg/hr in adults).
  • Weigh the child accurately on admission — even a 1 kg error changes fluid volumes significantly in small children.
💊 Paediatric Pain Management & Family Education +

Pain management:

  • Intranasal fentanyl: 1–1.5 mcg/kg — excellent procedural analgesia for dressing changes. Needle-free, fast onset, well tolerated. Used widely in paediatric burns units across GCC.
  • Oral sucrose solution: Infants under 3 months — 24% sucrose 0.5–2 ml on the tongue before and during painful procedures. Evidence-based neonatal pain management.
  • Oral morphine or oxycodone: Regular oral opioids for significant partial thickness burns with appropriate dose-weight calculation.
  • Non-pharmacological: Parental presence, distraction techniques (bubbles, videos, toys), music therapy — especially important in toddler age group. GCC families are typically closely involved and parents should be included in the dressing change process where appropriate.

Family education for prevention:

  • Keep children out of the kitchen, especially during cooking
  • Hot drinks should not be placed on low surfaces or held while holding a child
  • Water heater temperature — set to below 50°C to prevent tap water scalds
  • Electric socket covers, kettle cord management
  • Awareness campaigns: GCC burns units increasingly run community education programmes through social media — burns prevention messaging in Arabic reaches large community audiences

Burns Nursing Salaries in GCC

Burns is a recognised specialty and commands premium pay at all levels. Specialist experience in burns ICU, theatre (skin grafting scrub), or clinical nurse specialist roles attracts the highest packages in GCC nursing.

Role Saudi Arabia (SAR/mo) UAE (AED/mo) Qatar (QAR/mo) Notes
Burns Ward Nurse (RN, 2–5yr exp) SAR 8,000–10,500 AED 9,000–11,500 QAR 9,500–12,000 General burns ward, acute phase post-resus
Burns Ward Nurse (RN, 5+ yr burns exp) SAR 10,500–13,000 AED 11,500–14,000 QAR 12,000–15,000 Premium for dedicated burns experience
Burns ICU Nurse SAR 12,000–16,000 AED 13,000–16,500 QAR 13,500–18,000 ICU + burns specialty commands dual premium
Burns Theatre Scrub Nurse (Skin Grafting) SAR 11,000–15,000 AED 12,000–15,500 QAR 12,500–17,000 Skin grafting, escharotomy, reconstructive theatre
Burns CNS / Clinical Nurse Specialist SAR 14,000–18,000 AED 14,500–18,000 QAR 15,000–19,000 Advanced nursing practice, wound care leadership
Burns Nurse Educator SAR 13,000–17,000 AED 13,500–17,000 QAR 14,000–18,000 Training, simulation, competency development
💰
Package note: GCC nursing salary packages are typically tax-free and include furnished accommodation, annual flights home, medical insurance, end-of-service gratuity (typically 1 month salary/year of service), and shift allowances. Burns ICU nurses often receive additional ICU allowances. Specialised burns units — particularly Hamad Burns Centre in Qatar — are known for competitive packages with excellent professional development budgets.

Career Pathway & Certifications

Burns nursing does not yet have a single internationally recognised certification, but a strong portfolio of transferable qualifications and internal training makes burns nurses highly employable across the GCC.

Relevant Certifications

CWCN / CWOCN
Certified Wound Care Nurse / Certified Wound Ostomy Continence Nurse. Highly valued in burns nursing — demonstrates advanced wound management knowledge. Recognised and sought by GCC employers.
ACLS / BLS
Advanced Cardiac Life Support / Basic Life Support. Mandatory for all burns ICU nurses. Burns patients are at high cardiac risk — particularly electrical injuries which cause arrhythmias.
ATLS Observer
Advanced Trauma Life Support — nurses can attend as observers. Provides excellent context for the trauma management surrounding major burns. Recommended for any nurse working in a burns/trauma centre.
Infection Control Cert
Certification in Infection Control (CIC) — extremely relevant to burns where infection is the leading cause of mortality post-survival of initial injury. Burns units are high-risk infection environments.
Internal Burns Induction / Competency Programme
Most GCC burns centres (Hamad, KSMC, Rashid) run comprehensive internal burns nursing induction programmes for new recruits — typically 4–8 weeks. These cover burns physiology, resuscitation, wound care, dressing techniques, and unit-specific protocols. Completion of this programme is effectively the local qualification for burns nursing.

Burns Nursing Career Pathway

1
General Surgical / Medical Ward (2–3 years)
Build wound care foundations, IV drug management, post-operative nursing, pain management skills. Many burns units require general surgical experience as a prerequisite.
2
Burns Ward Nurse
First burns role. Acute burns management, dressing changes, Parkland formula implementation, escharotomy monitoring. Internal induction programme. Build TBSA assessment and burns-specific wound care skills.
3
Burns ICU Nurse (or Burns Theatre Scrub)
Significant salary uplift. Burns ICU manages ventilated patients post-inhalation injury, continuous Parkland resuscitation monitoring, multi-organ monitoring. Theatre scrub role focuses on skin grafting — a technically demanding specialty in its own right.
4
Burns Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS)
Advanced practice role — independent wound assessments, protocol development, MDT leadership, complex wound management, scar clinic involvement. Often requires a postgraduate wound care diploma or burns module. Highest clinical nursing salary band in burns.
5
Burns Nurse Educator / Researcher
Develop the next generation of burns nurses. Training, simulation, clinical research. Some GCC burns units (particularly Hamad) are affiliated with research programmes and offer nurses pathways into clinical research. Academic nursing roles increasingly available in Qatar and UAE.
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Global burns nursing certification: A specific burns nursing certification does not yet exist internationally, though organisations such as the American Burn Association are developing frameworks. In the interim, CWCN/CWOCN combined with burns-specific clinical experience and internal GCC training programmes represents the strongest portfolio. This is an area where early certification — when it arrives globally — will command a significant salary premium.