Hong Kong Med J 2023 Aug;29(4):363–5 | Epub 10 Aug 2023
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
COMMENTARY
Paediatric fire deaths: perspectives from Hong Kong
KL Hon, MB, BS, MD1; Karen KY Leung, MB, BS, MRCPCH1; Celia HY Chan, PhD2; WF Hui, MB, ChB, MRCPCH1; WL Cheung, MB, BS, MRCPCH1; FS Chung, MB, ChB, MRCPCH1; Patrick Ip, MB, BS, MD3
1 Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Hong Kong Children’s Hospital, Hong Kong SAR, China
2 Department of Social Work and Social Administration, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
3 Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
Corresponding author: Dr KL Hon (ehon@hotmail.com)
Injuries and deaths caused by fire occur in every
region of the world but are most concentrated in
middle- and lower-income areas; fire is also one of
the top 15 leading causes of child death.1 Accidents
and burns (12.5%) were major killers in children
aged 1 to 6 years.2 In a worldwide epidemiological
study of burns from the 1980s to 2004, a decrease
in the rates of both fatal and non-fatal burns was
observed for many countries.3 However, paediatric
deaths from burns in the developing world occur
at >10 times the rate seen in the developed world.
For instance, a study in 12 rural child care centres
situated in the urban slums of Patna in India in 1987
found that most burn injuries in children occurred
in the home were accidental and were most common
amongst the poorest patients.3 The presence of a developmental disability is another risk factor for
burns in children in the developing world.4 In Hong
Kong, fire-related deaths were seldom reported until
recently; as such, there is no registry or any peer-reviewed
publications from which researchers can
obtain data regarding incidence.
Physical injury is a major health problem
among children in Hong Kong, having surpassed
infectious diseases as the leading cause of childhood
mortality.5 6 7 8 In 2018, thermal injuries accounted for <15% of accidents and injuries for which children
were admitted to a paediatric intensive care unit,
the majority being hot water scalds.7 There had been no mortality due to a fire or burn injury involving
a child over the past decades in the city. However,
there have been several fatal incidents since 2020
(Table9 10 11 12), and these appear to have some features in common.
The latest incident, which occurred in July
2021, involved the deaths of two girls, aged 8 and 10
years, and their mother after a fire.9 The partner of
the mother was arrested for murder and arson. In
April 2021, an electric massage chair short circuited,
causing a fire in a public housing estate that killed
four members of a single family, including a 2-year-old
girl, and critically injured a fifth.10 In an incident
that occurred in November 2020, seven Nepalese
people, including a 9-year-old child, were killed and
several others were critically injured after a fire broke
out in a flat suspected to be an unlicensed restaurant
in a tenement building.11 Finally, in February 2020,
local media reported the death of a 7-year-old boy
caused by a fire resulting from the short circuiting
of an electric scooter that was charging near the
entrance of the 13th floor estate unit where he
lived.12 The father and his son were trapped, though
they were subsequently rescued. The man was
admitted to hospital in a critical condition but the
boy unfortunately died. Apparently, both parents
and the child each had a scooter that were stored in
the corridor outside their apartment. Child health
professionals should be alerted to an incident of fire death associated with electric scooter.
These incidents all involved a single family,
occurred in public housing or a single apartment
unit, and happened during the evening but not when
the children were sleeping. Crowdedness and living
environment may be considered as one of the risk
factors. A United States report on childhood fire-related
death highlighted that poverty and living in
rural counties are key risk factors for fire-related
fatalities.13 In another United States report, a case of three children dying in a house fire due to a non-functional smoke alarm and a sleeping arrangement
without easy egress was described.14 Although these
risk factors do not seem to apply completely to those
discussed above, the storage of electric scooters in an
escape route such as a corridor would delay escape
for others if a fire broke out.
Electrical appliances were involved in two
of the cases discussed above. In the incident that
occurred in February 2020, the child died and this
was likely the first case of a paediatric fire death
due to the short circuiting of a trendy city gadget.
Worldwide, there has been a significant rise in fires
caused by batteries or charging of electric scooters
or bikes. A 1993 study in New Zealand found
that most house fires were started by smoking
paraphernalia or electrical appliances and that
children were more likely to die in house fires than
from any other thermal injury event.15 The sale and
purchase of these scooters in Hong Kong must be
further reviewed and supervised. According to the
Transport Department, even riding self-balancing
electric scooters or hoverboards on streets and
pavements is illegal. Due to the increased use of
scooters and other two-wheeled gadgets across the
world, the department has recently classified them as
motor vehicles, requiring registration and licensing
before they can be used on public roads.12 Without
this, they are deemed a threat to road safety and a
driver of an unlicensed vehicle is liable to a fine and
imprisonment for 3 months on a first conviction.
This commentary seeks to generate further
attention around the issues of paediatric burns
and fire-related deaths, as well as the legislation
governing the use of electric scooters. Healthcare
policy makers should set up a Hong Kong–specific
registry to assess our local circumstances. It is
recommended that childhood injury prevention,
especially for fire-related deaths, be given prime
consideration in all policies involving children.
Author contributions
All authors contributed to the concept or design of the study, acquisition of the data, analysis or interpretation of the
data, drafting of the manuscript, and critical revision of the
manuscript for important intellectual content. All authors
had full access to the data, contributed to the study, approved
the final version for publication, and take responsibility for its
accuracy and integrity.
Conflicts of interest
As an editor of the journal, KL Hon was not involved in the peer review process. Other authors have no conflicts of
interest to disclose.
Funding/support
This commentary received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
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