Nice, as a medic, and a burn victim with total 67% involvement. I have a grasp on burns, before, during and after. You are sooooo correct in saying burn prevention. As a soldier at one point in my life I have seen and had my share of pain. With the burn PT there is no escaping the pain. You can't move or roll over to get some relief. The pain will only follow you or become worse.
Fluid loss is so great a threat that there is formula we use to help keep a PT hydrated, from fluid loss. And NO THEY DON'T USE NORMAL SALINE. Then there is the next 72 hours that a burn has to "CURE", for those who don't know that is the amount of time it takes a bad burn to finish killing tissues. Oh lets not forget temp. regulation, a burn PT can become hypothermic, as the skin also helps you regulate your temp. During this time the PT has to be debrided, dressed, kept sterile as possible, comfortable as narcotics will make them. This is not to mention that you have to feed them high protein foods or shakes, the amount of dressings, antibiotics, gloves, mask, and other medical supplies.
So yes PREVENTING a burn is paramount.
Good luck, be safe, God bless.