From the Children's HealthSM/Children's Medical Center Dallas, Department of Injury Prevention (P.M., N.H., M.A.), Dallas, Texas.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2017 Nov;83(5S Suppl 2):S233-S239. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000001634.
Traffic-related injuries are the leading fatal injury among children in the United States, but no published study compares the different types of traffic-related pediatric injuries to date. Thus, this study was aimed at examining the10-year trend of traffic-related injury among children at a pediatric hospital and to assess if there were differences in injury mechanism.
All data were drawn from a Level-1 pediatric trauma center in North Texas in 2005-2014. Demographic characteristics, length of hospitalization, and patient type were included. Severity of injury outcome was assessed by injury severity score and fatality. The traffic-related injury mechanism included motor vehicle collision (MVC), motor-pedestrian collision (MPC), and motorcycle/moped collision (MMC). Description analyses and multinominal logistic regressions were applied to examine the factors associated with the type of motor-related injuries adjusting for covariates. All analyses were conducted by STATA version 14.0.
A total of 3,742 traffic-related pediatric injuries were identified. The mean (SD) age was 6.4 (4.0) years; most patients were boys (59%) and Hispanic (40%). There was a waving trend of the number of traffic-related injuries over the 10-year period. Compared with MVC, demographic disparities exist with children experiencing an MPC injury. Hispanic and African American children were more likely to have an MPC but less likely to have a motorcycle/moped collision injury (relative risk [RR], 1.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-1.9; RR, 2.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.9-2.4, respectively). Children with an MPC injury had a more severe outcome than those with an MVC injury, but no difference was found in fatality. The MCC injuries did not significantly differ from MVC in injury severity.
Although efforts have been made to prevent MVC-related pediatric injuries, the trend of MVCs was stable in the most recent years. The MPC-related injury continues to be a higher likelihood of severe pediatric trauma. Thus, continuing efforts and innovative intervention programs are still needed to prevent traffic-related pediatric injuries.
Epidemiologic study, level III.
在美国,交通相关伤害是儿童致命伤害的主要原因,但迄今为止,尚无研究比较不同类型的交通相关儿科伤害。因此,本研究旨在检查一家德克萨斯州北部儿科医院 10 年来与交通相关的儿童伤害趋势,并评估伤害机制是否存在差异。
所有数据均来自德克萨斯州北部一家一级儿科创伤中心 2005-2014 年的数据。包括人口统计学特征、住院时间和患者类型。损伤严重程度评分和死亡率评估损伤严重程度结局。交通相关损伤机制包括机动车碰撞(MVC)、机动车-行人碰撞(MPC)和摩托车/轻便摩托车碰撞(MMC)。描述性分析和多项逻辑回归用于检查与调整协变量相关的与机动车相关损伤类型相关的因素。所有分析均使用 STATA 版本 14.0 进行。
共确定了 3742 例交通相关儿科损伤。平均(SD)年龄为 6.4(4.0)岁;大多数患者为男性(59%)和西班牙裔(40%)。10 年来,交通相关伤害的数量呈波动趋势。与 MVC 相比,发生 MPC 损伤的儿童存在人口统计学差异。西班牙裔和非裔美国儿童更有可能发生 MPC 损伤,但不太可能发生摩托车/轻便摩托车碰撞损伤(相对风险 [RR],1.6;95%置信区间,1.3-1.9;RR,2.0;95%置信区间,1.9-2.4)。发生 MPC 损伤的儿童的损伤严重程度比发生 MVC 损伤的儿童更严重,但死亡率无差异。MCC 损伤在损伤严重程度方面与 MVC 无显著差异。
尽管已经努力预防与 MVC 相关的儿科伤害,但最近几年 MVC 的趋势仍保持稳定。MPC 相关伤害仍是严重儿科创伤的更高风险。因此,仍然需要继续努力并实施创新干预计划,以预防与交通相关的儿科伤害。
流行病学研究,III 级。