Griffin Bronwyn R, Watt Kerrianne, Shields Linda E, Kimble Roy M
School of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Australia Queensland Children's Medical Research Institute, Royal Children's Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
School of Public Health, Tropical Medicine and Rehabilitation Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia School of Population Health, University of Queensland, Australia.
Inj Prev. 2014 Oct;20(5):302-9. doi: 10.1136/injuryprev-2013-040932. Epub 2014 Jan 21.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the characteristics associated with fatal and non-fatal low-speed vehicle run-over (LSVRO) events in relation to person, incident and injury characteristics, in order to identify appropriate points for intervention and injury prevention.
Data on all known LSVRO events in Queensland, Australia, over 11 calendar years (1999-2009) were extracted from five different databases representing the continuum of care (prehospital to fatality) and manually linked. Descriptive and multivariate analyses were used to analyse the sample characteristics in relation to demographics, health service usage, outcomes, incident characteristics, and injury characteristics.
Of the 1641 LSVRO incidents, 98.4% (n=1615) were non-fatal, and 1.6% were fatal (n=26). Over half the children required admission to hospital (56%, n=921); mean length of stay was 3.4 days. Younger children aged 0-4 years were more frequently injured, and experienced more serious injuries with worse outcomes. Patterns of injury (injury type and severity), injury characteristics (eg, time of injury, vehicle type, driver of vehicle, incident location), and demographic characteristics (such as socioeconomic status, indigenous status, remoteness), varied according to age group. Almost half (45.6%; n=737) the events occurred outside major cities, and approximately 10% of events involved indigenous children. Parents were most commonly the vehicle drivers in fatal incidents. While larger vehicles such as four-wheel drives (4WD) were most frequently involved in LSVRO events resulting in fatalities, cars were most frequently involved in non-fatal events.
This is the first study, to the authors' knowledge, to analyse the characteristics of fatal and non-fatal LSVRO events in children aged 0-15 years on a state-wide basis. Characteristics of LSVRO events varied with age, thus age-specific interventions are required. Children living outside major cities, and indigenous children, were over-represented in these data. Further research is required to identify the burden of injury in these groups.
本研究旨在调查与致命和非致命低速车辆碾压(LSVRO)事件相关的人员、事故和伤害特征,以便确定合适的干预点和预防伤害措施。
从代表连续医疗护理(院前到死亡)的五个不同数据库中提取澳大利亚昆士兰州11个历年(1999 - 2009年)所有已知的LSVRO事件数据,并进行人工关联。使用描述性和多变量分析来分析与人口统计学、医疗服务使用情况、结果、事故特征和伤害特征相关的样本特征。
在1641起LSVRO事件中,98.4%(n = 1615)为非致命事件,1.6%为致命事件(n = 26)。超过一半的儿童需要住院治疗(56%,n = 921);平均住院时间为3.4天。0至4岁的幼儿受伤频率更高,且受伤更严重,预后更差。伤害模式(伤害类型和严重程度)、伤害特征(如受伤时间、车辆类型、车辆驾驶员、事故地点)和人口统计学特征(如社会经济地位、原住民身份、偏远程度)因年龄组而异。近一半(45.6%;n = 737)的事件发生在大城市以外,约10%的事件涉及原住民儿童。在致命事件中,父母最常是车辆驾驶员。虽然四轮驱动车(4WD)等较大型车辆最常涉及导致死亡的LSVRO事件,但汽车最常涉及非致命事件。
据作者所知,这是第一项在全州范围内分析0至15岁儿童致命和非致命LSVRO事件特征的研究。LSVRO事件的特征因年龄而异,因此需要针对特定年龄的干预措施。大城市以外地区的儿童和原住民儿童在这些数据中占比过高。需要进一步研究以确定这些群体的伤害负担。