Osborne Jodie M, Davey Tamzyn M, Spinks Anneliese B, McClure Roderick J, Sipe Neil, Cameron Cate M
School of Medicine, Griffith University, Meadowbrook, Australia.
The University of Queensland, School of Public Health, Herston, Australia.
Soc Sci Med. 2016 Mar;153:250-7. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.02.017. Epub 2016 Feb 15.
This study examined the relationship between home risk and hospital treated injury in Australian children up to five years old. Women with children between two and four years of age enrolled in the Environments for Healthy Living (EFHL): Griffith Birth Cohort Study were invited to complete a Home Injury Prevention Survey from March 2013 to June 2014. A total home risk score (HRS) was calculated and linked to the child's injury related state-wide hospital emergency and admissions data and EFHL baseline demographic surveys. Data from 562 households relating to 566 child participants were included. We found an inverse relationship between home risk and child injury, with children living in homes with the least injury risk (based on the absence of hazardous structural features of the home and safe practices reported) having 1.90 times the injury rate of children living in high risk homes (95% CI 1.15-3.14). Whilst this appears counter-intuitive, families in the lowest risk homes were more likely to be socio-economically disadvantaged than families in the highest risk homes (more sole parents, lower maternal education levels, younger maternal age and lower income). After adjusting for demographic and socio-economic factors, the relationship between home risk and injury was no longer significant (p > 0.05). Our findings suggest that children in socio-economically deprived families have higher rates of injury, despite living in a physical environment that contains substantially fewer injury risks than their less deprived counterparts. Although measures to reduce child injury risk through the modification of the physical environment remain an important part of the injury prevention approach, our study findings support continued efforts to implement societal-wide, long term policy and practice changes to address the socioeconomic differentials in child health outcomes.
本研究调查了澳大利亚5岁以下儿童的家庭风险与因伤住院之间的关系。参与“健康生活环境(EFHL):格里菲斯出生队列研究”的2至4岁儿童的母亲被邀请在2013年3月至2014年6月期间完成一项家庭伤害预防调查。计算了家庭风险总分(HRS),并将其与该州范围内与儿童伤害相关的医院急诊和入院数据以及EFHL基线人口统计学调查数据相联系。纳入了来自562户家庭的566名儿童参与者的数据。我们发现家庭风险与儿童伤害之间存在负相关关系,即居住在伤害风险最低家庭(基于家庭无危险结构特征及所报告的安全做法)的儿童,其伤害发生率是居住在高风险家庭儿童的1.90倍(95%置信区间为1.15 - 3.14)。虽然这似乎有悖常理,但与高风险家庭相比,风险最低家庭的家庭在社会经济方面更可能处于不利地位(单亲家庭更多、母亲教育水平较低、母亲年龄较小且收入较低)。在对人口统计学和社会经济因素进行调整后,家庭风险与伤害之间的关系不再显著(p > 0.05)。我们的研究结果表明,社会经济贫困家庭的儿童伤害发生率较高,尽管他们居住的物理环境中的伤害风险比条件较好家庭的儿童少得多。虽然通过改善物理环境来降低儿童伤害风险的措施仍然是伤害预防方法的重要组成部分,但我们的研究结果支持继续努力实施全社会范围的长期政策和实践变革,以解决儿童健康结果方面的社会经济差异问题。