International Injury Research Unit, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Public Health. 2013 Aug;127(8):699-703. doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2012.12.020. Epub 2013 Mar 13.
Injuries and trauma are a major cause of mortality and morbidity in low and middle income countries (LMICs). In Pakistan, a low income South Asian developing country, they are among the top ten contributors to disease burden and causes of disabilities, with the majority of the burden falling on younger people in the population. This burden of injuries comes with a high social and economic cost. Several distal and proximal determinants, such as poverty, political instability, frequent natural disasters, and the lack of legislation and enforcement of preventive measures, make the Pakistani population susceptible to injuries. Historically, there has been a low level of investment in the prevention of injuries in Pakistan. Data is limited and while a public sector surveillance project has been initiated in one major urban centre, the major sources of information on injuries have been police and hospital records. Given the cost-effectiveness of injury prevention programs and their success in other LMICs, it is essential that the public sector invest in injury prevention through improving national policies and creating a strong evidence-based strategy while collaborating with the private sector to promote injury prevention and mobilizing people to engage in these programs.
在中低收入国家(LMICs),伤害和创伤是导致死亡率和发病率的主要原因。在巴基斯坦,一个南亚低收入发展中国家,伤害是导致疾病负担和残疾的十大原因之一,大多数负担落在人口中的年轻人身上。这种伤害负担带来了很高的社会和经济成本。一些偏远和近端的决定因素,如贫困、政治不稳定、频繁的自然灾害以及缺乏立法和执行预防措施,使巴基斯坦人口容易受到伤害。从历史上看,巴基斯坦对预防伤害的投资水平较低。数据有限,虽然在一个主要城市中心启动了一个公共部门监测项目,但伤害的主要信息来源是警察和医院记录。鉴于伤害预防计划的成本效益及其在其他 LMICs 的成功,公共部门必须通过改善国家政策和制定强有力的基于证据的战略来投资伤害预防,同时与私营部门合作促进伤害预防并动员人们参与这些计划。