Anderson Craig L, Dominguez Kathlynn M, Hoang Teresa V, Rowther Armaan Ahmed, Carroll M Christy, Lotfipour Shahram, Hoonpongsimanont Wirachin, Chakravarthy Bharath
Department of Emergency Medicine and the Center for Trauma and Injury Prevention Research, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine; Irvine, California.
Ann Adv Automot Med. 2012;56:31-6.
This study tests the hypothesis that most pedestrian collisions occur near victims' homes. Patients involved in automobile versus pedestrian collisions who presented to the emergency department at a Level I trauma center between January 2000 and December 2009 were included in the study. Patient demographics were obtained from the trauma registry. Home address was determined from hospital records, collision site was determined from the paramedic run sheet, and the shortest walking distance between the collision site and pedestrian residence was determined using Google Maps. We summarized distances for groups with the median and compared groups using the Kruskal-Wallis rank test. We identified 1917 pedestrian injury cases and identified both residence address and collision location for 1213 cases (63%). Forty-eight percent of the collisions were near home (within 1.1 km, 95% CI 45-51%). Median distance from residence to collision site was 1.4 km (interquartile range 0.3-7.4 km). For ages 0-17, the median distance 0.7 km, and 59% (95% CI 54-63%) of collisions occurred near home. For ages 65 and older, the median distance was 0.6 km and 65% (95% CI 55-73%) were injured near home. Distance did not differ by sex, race, ethnicity, or blood alcohol level. More severe injuries (Injury Severity Score ≥ 16) occurred further from home than less severe injuries (median 1.9 km vs. 1.3 km, p=.01). Patients with a hospital stay of 3 days or less were injured closer to home (median 1.3 km) than patients with a hospital stay of 4 days or more (median 1.8 km, p=.001). Twenty-two percent were injured within the same census tract as their home, 22% on the boundary of their home census tract, and 55% in a different census tract.
本研究检验了这样一个假设,即大多数行人碰撞事故发生在受害者家附近。纳入研究的对象为2000年1月至2009年12月期间在一级创伤中心急诊科就诊的汽车与行人碰撞事故中的患者。患者人口统计学数据来自创伤登记处。家庭住址从医院记录中确定,碰撞地点从护理人员的出诊记录中确定,碰撞地点与行人住所之间的最短步行距离使用谷歌地图确定。我们用中位数总结了各组的距离,并使用Kruskal-Wallis秩和检验比较各组。我们确定了1917例行人受伤病例,其中1213例(63%)确定了居住地址和碰撞地点。48%的碰撞事故发生在家附近(1.1公里范围内,95%置信区间45 - 51%)。从住所到碰撞地点的中位数距离为1.4公里(四分位间距0.3 - 7.4公里)。对于0至17岁的人群,中位数距离为0.7公里,59%(95%置信区间54 - 63%)的碰撞事故发生在家附近。对于65岁及以上的人群,中位数距离为0.6公里,65%(95%置信区间55 - 73%)在家附近受伤。距离在性别、种族、民族或血液酒精水平方面没有差异。与轻伤相比,重伤(损伤严重度评分≥16)发生地离家更远(中位数1.9公里对1.3公里,p = 0.01)。住院3天或以下的患者受伤地点离家更近(中位数1.3公里),而住院4天或以上的患者受伤地点离家更远(中位数1.8公里,p = 0.001)。22%的患者在其家所在的同一普查区受伤,22%在其家所在普查区的边界受伤,55%在不同的普查区受伤。