https://www.selleckchem.com/products/l-alpha-phosphatidylcholine.html Skin autografting is performed widely for deep burn wounds as an ideal coverage. Scaring at the site of grafting has been always a challenge for surgeons. Many methods have been proposed to lessen the probability of scaring, but conflicting results have been obtained. It is said that the suture type is important in the development of scaring. Seams technique has also been introduced to decrease scar after autografting. We sought to compare two approximating (AP) and overlapping (OV) Seams technique to compare the development of scars. Patients with deep burns of 10% to 50% TBSA who were candidates for grafting entered this double-blind randomized trial. One side of the graft was fixed with a stapler using the "approximating" technique and the other side was fixed by the "overlapping" technique with a 1-2 mm margin overlap. The Vancouver Scar Scale (VSS) standard was used to evaluate scar formation at the graft edges at six months. Data entered SPSS 16 and analyzed. A P-value below 0.05 was considered asegarding pigmentation, height, and pliability indices. The study aimed to determine the factors which influence clinician behaviour and adherence to best practice when clinicians provide the initial care for paediatric burn patients admitted to a burns unit. Optimal initial care of burn patients influences morbidity and mortality. Non-burn specialist clinician adherence to best practice is influenced by previously unexplored factors. General inductive qualitative methods were used to explore factors which influenced clinicians providing acute pre-admission burn care for children in Western Australia. Interviews of nineteen clinicians using standardised open-ended questions based on the Gilbert Behaviour Engineering Model were used to collect data. The main influencing factors identified were the telehealth service which supported practice, whilst IT issues provided challenges to clinicians. Teleheal