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1987 - 1994年儿童伤害的发生率及费用:人口统计学细分

Incidence and costs of 1987-1994 childhood injuries: demographic breakdowns.

作者信息

Danseco E R, Miller T R, Spicer R S

机构信息

Public Services Research Institute, Children's Safety Network Economics and Insurance Resource Center, Landover, Maryland 20785, USA.

出版信息

Pediatrics. 2000 Feb;105(2):E27. doi: 10.1542/peds.105.2.e27.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Injuries pose a threat to health and well-being and are a major source of medical spending in the United States for children and youth 0 to 21 years of age. This study provides national estimates of the incidence of fatal and nonfatal childhood injuries and comprehensive cost estimates by age, gender, race, family income, metropolitan residence, and place of incident.

METHODS

Eight years of National Health Interview Survey data (1987 to 1994) were used to estimate nonfatal injury incidence rates among children and youth 21 years of age and younger. The survey documents all medically attended or temporarily disabling injuries within the 2 weeks before the interview. Injuries were defined as diagnoses 800-995 in the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, excluding late effects cases. Fatality counts came from 1994 Vital Statistics. Estimates of the costs of injuries (1994 US dollars) included medical spending, lost future work, and lost quality of life. Medical payments included spending on hospital and professional services, rehabilitation, prescriptions, home health care, and medical equipment. Lost future work and lost quality of life consisted of the present value of work that children will be unable to do as adults if they are killed or permanently disabled combined with the pain and suffering that children and their families experience because of the injury. Cost estimates excluded parental income losses from work missed, property damage, legal costs, and insurance claims-adjustment costs related to permanent disability and death.

RESULTS

INCIDENCE. A total of 3,073 injury episodes for 3,058 children were obtained from 8 years of National Health Interview Survey data. This represents 20.6 million children in the United States who were injured each year, or approximately 25 per 100 children. This translates to 56,000 nonfatal injury episodes each day that require medical attention or limit children's activity. For fatal injuries, the rate was 38 children per 100,000. The nonfatal injury rate for males (mean: 30; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 29,31) was higher than the rate for females (mean: 20; 95% CI: 19,21); the fatal injury rate for males was more than twice that of females. Injury rates increased with age. Children 0 to 9 years of age had the lowest rate of nonfatal injury. Rates for nonfatal injury among children 0 to 4 years of age were lower (mean: 20; 95% CI: 18,21) than those for the 5 to 9 age group (mean: 22; 95% CI: 20, 23). However, the rate for fatal injuries (21 per 100,000) among the 0 to 4 age group was higher than the 5 to 9 age group (9 per 100,000). Nonfatal injury rates for children 10 years of age and older were higher, with the highest estimated injury rates in late adolescence (15-19 years; mean: 31; 95% CI: 29,33). Nonfatal injuries occurred at higher rates among white children (mean: 27; 95% CI: 26,28) than black children (mean: 19; 95% CI: 17,21) or children from other racial backgrounds (mean: 13; 95% CI: 10,16). The reverse was true for fatal injuries, with higher fatality rates among black children (59 per 100,000). Children in families with incomes under $5,000 had the highest rate of nonfatal injury (mean: 31; 95% CI: 27,35), followed by those in the $35,000 to $49,999 income range (mean: 25; 95% CI: 23,27). The rate of nonfatal injuries in the other income brackets were fairly similar, with those in the highest income bracket having the lowest rate (mean: 14; 95% CI: 13,15). Fatality rates by family income were not available. The nonfatal injury rate in nonmetropolitan areas (mean: 10; 95% CI: 9,11) was higher than in metropolitan areas (mean: 8; 95% CI: 7,8); the same was true for fatal injury rates (33 per 100,000 in nonmetropolitan areas vs 25 in metropolitan areas). Males consistently had higher injury rates than females across all places of injury. Youth 15 years of age and older had higher rates for injuries that occur on the public roads, in recreatio

摘要

目标

伤害对健康和幸福构成威胁,是美国0至21岁儿童和青少年医疗支出的主要来源。本研究提供了按年龄、性别、种族、家庭收入、大都市居住情况和事故发生地点划分的儿童致命和非致命伤害发生率的全国估计数以及综合成本估计数。

方法

利用八年的国家健康访谈调查数据(1987年至1994年)来估计21岁及以下儿童和青少年的非致命伤害发生率。该调查记录了访谈前两周内所有接受医疗救治或导致暂时残疾的伤害。伤害被定义为《国际疾病分类》第九版中的诊断编码800 - 995,但不包括后遗症病例。死亡人数来自1994年的生命统计数据。伤害成本估计(1994年美元)包括医疗支出、未来工作损失和生活质量损失。医疗费用包括医院和专业服务、康复、处方、家庭医疗保健和医疗设备方面的支出。未来工作损失和生活质量损失包括如果儿童死亡或永久残疾,他们成年后无法从事的工作的现值,以及儿童及其家庭因伤害所经历的痛苦。成本估计不包括父母因误工造成的收入损失、财产损失、法律费用以及与永久残疾和死亡相关的保险理赔调整费用。

结果

发生率。从八年的国家健康访谈调查数据中获得了3058名儿童的3073起伤害事件。这代表美国每年有2060万儿童受伤,约每100名儿童中有25名受伤。这意味着每天有56000起非致命伤害事件需要医疗救治或限制儿童活动。对于致命伤害,发生率为每10万人中有38名儿童。男性的非致命伤害发生率(均值:30;95%置信区间[CI]:29, 31)高于女性(均值:20;95% CI:19, 21);男性的致命伤害发生率是女性的两倍多。伤害发生率随年龄增长而增加。0至9岁儿童的非致命伤害发生率最低。0至4岁儿童的非致命伤害发生率(均值:20;95% CI:18, 21)低于5至9岁年龄组(均值:22;95% CI:20, 23)。然而,0至4岁年龄组的致命伤害发生率(每10万人中有21名)高于5至9岁年龄组(每10万人中有9名)。10岁及以上儿童的非致命伤害发生率较高,在青春期后期(15 - 19岁)估计伤害发生率最高(均值:31;95% CI:29, 33)。白人儿童的非致命伤害发生率(均值:27;95% CI:26, 28)高于黑人儿童(均值:19;95% CI:17, 21)或其他种族背景的儿童(均值:13;95% CI:10, 16)。致命伤害情况则相反,黑人儿童的致命伤害发生率较高(每10万人中有59名)。收入低于5000美元家庭的儿童非致命伤害发生率最高(均值:31;95% CI:27, 35),其次是收入在35000至49999美元范围内的儿童(均值:25;95% CI:23, 27)。其他收入阶层的非致命伤害发生率相当相似,最高收入阶层的发生率最低(均值:14;95% CI:13,

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