Siegler Veronique, Al-Hamad Alaa, Blane David
Office for National Statistics.
Health Stat Q. 2010 Winter(48):3-35. doi: 10.1057/hsq.2010.19.
This article presents age-specific mortality rates of children for selected causes of accidents and assault using the National Statistics Socio-economic Classification (NS-SEC). The study is an analysis of the social inequalities in fatal childhood accidents and assault at the start of the 21st century. It aims to identify the causes and age groups for which these inequalities are the widest.
In order to classify children by NS-SEC, the most advantaged class of the biological or adoptive parents was used. Death registrations provided the number of deaths from accidents and assault for children aged from 28 days to 15 years, in England and Wales, between 2001 and 2003. The population of children by NS-SEC and age group was obtained from the 2001 Census. Age-specific mortality rates were estimated. Inequalities were measured using socio-economic gradients in mortality.
There were wide social inequalities in fatal accidents and assaults for children aged between 28 days and 15 years. The overall mortality rate in the routine class was 64 per million children aged up to 15, 4.5 times the rate of children with parents in the higher managerial and professional class. The greatest inequalities in accidental mortality for children in that age group were observed for fire and pedestrian accidents, followed by accidental suffocation. Infants at least 28 days but less than one year were subject to the widest inequalities of all age groups in fatal accidents and assault. The highest mortality rate in this study resulted from assault on babies whose parents could not be classified by occupation. Pedestrian and other transport accidents were the greatest causes of death for children between 5 and 15 years old. Inequalities were much larger for pedestrian than for other transport accidents for children aged 14 years and under. The leading cause of death for children aged less than five years was suffocation, followed by drowning and exposure to fire/hot substances. In that age group, the risk of death from exposure to fire was significantly higher for children whose parents could not be classified by occupation.
Substantial social inequalities in childhood mortality from accidents and assault existed in 2001-03. Reducing the large inequalities between the most advantaged class and the most disadvantaged group in the non-occupied category, would make a substantial impact on childhood deaths from accidents and assaults. If the mortality rates in the latter group were the same as in the most advantaged managerial and professional class, deaths of infants of at least 28 days but less than one year, from assault would be reduced by 62 per cent. Deaths from fire, accidental suffocation and pedestrian accidents in the under fives would be reduced by 50 per cent, 25 per cent and 28 per cent respectively. Deaths in pedestrian and transport accidents for children aged 5-15 would be reduced by 25 per cent and 16 per cent respectively.
本文使用国家统计局社会经济分类法(NS - SEC)呈现了特定年龄段儿童因选定的事故和暴力侵害原因导致的死亡率。该研究分析了21世纪初儿童致命事故和暴力侵害中的社会不平等现象。其目的是确定这些不平等最为显著的原因和年龄组。
为了根据NS - SEC对儿童进行分类,采用了亲生父母或养父母中最具优势的阶层。死亡登记提供了2001年至2003年英格兰和威尔士28天至15岁儿童因事故和暴力侵害导致的死亡人数。按NS - SEC和年龄组划分的儿童人口数据来自2001年人口普查。估算了特定年龄段的死亡率。使用死亡率的社会经济梯度来衡量不平等现象。
28天至15岁儿童在致命事故和暴力侵害方面存在广泛的社会不平等。常规阶层中每百万15岁以下儿童的总体死亡率为64,是父母属于高级管理和专业阶层儿童死亡率的4.5倍。该年龄组儿童意外死亡率方面,火灾和行人事故的不平等最为显著,其次是意外窒息。至少28天但未满一岁的婴儿在所有年龄组的致命事故和暴力侵害方面存在最广泛的不平等。本研究中最高的死亡率是由于对父母职业无法分类的婴儿的暴力侵害导致的。行人及其他交通事故是5至15岁儿童的主要死因。14岁及以下儿童中,行人事故的不平等程度远大于其他交通事故。5岁以下儿童的主要死因是窒息,其次是溺水和接触火灾/热物质。在该年龄组中,父母职业无法分类的儿童因接触火灾导致死亡的风险显著更高。
2001 - 2003年期间,儿童因事故和暴力侵害导致的死亡率存在巨大的社会不平等。缩小非就业类别中最具优势阶层与最弱势群体之间的巨大差距,将对儿童因事故和暴力侵害导致的死亡产生重大影响。如果后一组的死亡率与最具优势的管理和专业阶层相同,至少28天但未满一岁婴儿因暴力侵害导致的死亡将减少62%。5岁以下儿童因火灾、意外窒息和行人事故导致的死亡将分别减少50%、25%和28%。5至15岁儿童因行人及交通事故导致的死亡将分别减少25%和16%。