Stewart Barclay T, Lafta Riyadh, Cherewick Megan, Esa Al Shatari Sahar A, Flaxman Abraham D, Hagopian Amy, Galway Lindsay P, Takaro Tim K, Burnham Gilbert, Kushner Adam L, Mock Charles
Department of Surgery, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA School of Public Health, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana Department of Surgery, Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, Kumasi, Ghana Surgeons OverSeas (SOS) and Fogarty International Center (R25-TW009345; D43-TW007267).
Department of Community Medicine, Al Munstansiriya University, Baghdad, Iraq Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Inj Prev. 2016 Oct;22(5):321-7. doi: 10.1136/injuryprev-2015-041707. Epub 2016 Feb 5.
Around 50 million people are killed or left disabled on the world's roads each year; most are in middle-income cities. In addition to this background risk, Baghdad has been plagued by decades of insecurity that undermine injury prevention strategies. This study aimed to determine death and disability and household consequences of road traffic injuries (RTIs) in postinvasion Baghdad.
A two-stage, cluster-randomised, community-based household survey was performed in May 2014 to determine the civilian burden of injury from 2003 to 2014 in Baghdad. In addition to questions about household member death, households were interviewed regarding crash specifics, healthcare required, disability, relatedness to conflict and resultant financial hardship.
Nine hundred households, totalling 5148 individuals, were interviewed. There were 86 RTIs (16% of all reported injuries) that resulted in 8 deaths (9% of RTIs). Serious RTIs increased in the decade postinvasion and were estimated to be 26 341 in 2013 (350 per 100 000 persons). 53% of RTIs involved pedestrians, motorcyclists or bicyclists. 51% of families directly affected by a RTI reported a significant decline in household income or suffered food insecurity.
RTIs were extremely common and have increased in Baghdad. Young adults, pedestrians, motorcyclists and bicyclists were the most frequently injured or killed by RTCs. There is a large burden of road injury, and the families of road injury victims suffered considerably from lost wages, often resulting in household food insecurity. Ongoing conflict may worsen RTI risk and undermine efforts to reduce road traffic death and disability.
每年全球约有5000万人死于道路交通事故或因此致残,其中大多数发生在中等收入城市。除了这种背景风险外,巴格达还饱受数十年不安全因素的困扰,这削弱了伤害预防策略。本研究旨在确定入侵后巴格达道路交通伤害(RTIs)造成的死亡、残疾情况以及家庭后果。
2014年5月进行了一项两阶段、整群随机、基于社区的家庭调查,以确定2003年至2014年巴格达平民的伤害负担。除了询问家庭成员死亡情况外,还就事故细节、所需医疗护理、残疾情况、与冲突的关联以及由此导致的经济困难对家庭进行了访谈。
共访谈了900户家庭,总计5148人。发生了86起道路交通伤害(占所有报告伤害的16%),导致8人死亡(占道路交通伤害的9%)。入侵后的十年间,严重道路交通伤害有所增加,2013年估计达26341起(每10万人中有350起)。53%的道路交通伤害涉及行人、摩托车手或自行车骑行者。直接受道路交通伤害影响的家庭中,51%报告家庭收入大幅下降或面临粮食不安全问题。
道路交通伤害在巴格达极为常见且呈上升趋势。年轻人、行人、摩托车手和自行车骑行者是道路交通碰撞中最常受伤或死亡的群体。道路伤害负担沉重,道路伤害受害者的家庭因工资损失而遭受严重影响,常常导致家庭粮食不安全。持续的冲突可能会增加道路交通伤害风险,并破坏减少道路交通死亡和残疾的努力。