Harmon Katherine J, Proescholdbell Scott K, Register-Mihalik Johna, Richardson David B, Waller Anna E, Marshall Stephen W
Department of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2101 McGavran-Greenberg Hall, CB #7435, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-7435, USA.
Injury and Violence Prevention Branch, Chronic Disease and Injury Section, NC Division of Public Health, NC Department of Health and Human Services, 5505 Six Forks Road, Raleigh, NC, 27609, USA.
Inj Epidemiol. 2018 May 15;5(1):23. doi: 10.1186/s40621-018-0152-0.
Sports and recreational activities are an important cause of injury among children and youth, with sports-related traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) being of particular concern given the developing brain. This paper reports the characteristics of sport and recreation-related (SR) emergency department (ED) visits among school-age children and youth in a statewide population.
This study included all injury-related visits made to all North Carolina 24/7 acute-care civilian hospital-affiliated EDs by school-age youth, 5-18 years of age, during 2010-2014 (N = 918,662). Population estimates were based on US decennial census data. Poisson regression methods were used to estimate incidence rates and rate ratios.
During the five-year period, there were 767,075 unintentional injury-related ED visits among school-age youth, of which 213,518 (27.8%) were identified as SR injuries. The average annual absolute number and incidence rate (IR) of SR ED visits among school-age youth was 42,704 and 2374.5 ED visits per 100,000 person-years (95% confidence interval [CI], 2364.4-2384.6), respectively. In comparison to other unintentional injuries among school-age youth, SR ED visits were more likely to be diagnosed with an injury to the upper extremity (Injury Proportion Ratio [IPR] = 1.28; 95% CI, 1.27-1.29), the lower extremity (IPR = 1.14; 95% CI, 1.13-1.15), and a TBI or other head/neck/facial injury (IPR = 1.12; 95% CI, 1.11-1.13). Among ED visits made by school-age youth, the leading cause of SR injury was sports/athletics played as a group or team. The leading cause of team sports/athletics injury was American tackle football among boys and soccer among girls. The proportion of ED visits diagnosed with a TBI varied by age and sex, with 15-18 year-olds and boys having the highest population-based rates.
Sports and recreational activities are an important component of a healthy lifestyle, but they are also a major source of injury morbidity among school-age youth. Physical activity interventions should take into account sex and age differences in SR injury risk.
体育和娱乐活动是儿童和青少年受伤的重要原因,鉴于儿童大脑仍在发育,与运动相关的创伤性脑损伤(TBI)尤其令人担忧。本文报告了全州范围内学龄儿童和青少年与体育和娱乐相关(SR)的急诊就诊情况。
本研究纳入了2010 - 2014年期间北卡罗来纳州所有与24/7急诊服务的民用附属医院急诊科有过受伤相关就诊经历的5 - 18岁学龄青少年(N = 918,662)。人口估计基于美国十年一次的人口普查数据。采用泊松回归方法估计发病率和率比。
在这五年期间,学龄青少年中有767,075次与意外伤害相关的急诊就诊,其中213,518次(27.8%)被确定为SR损伤。学龄青少年中SR急诊就诊的年平均绝对数和发病率分别为42,704次和每100,000人年2374.5次急诊就诊(95%置信区间[CI],2364.4 - 2384.6)。与学龄青少年的其他意外伤害相比,SR急诊就诊更有可能被诊断为上肢损伤(损伤比例比[IPR] = 1.28;95% CI,1.27 - 1.29)、下肢损伤(IPR = 1.14;95% CI,1.13 - 1.15)以及TBI或其他头/颈/面部损伤(IPR = 1.12;95% CI,1.11 - 1.1)。在学龄青少年的急诊就诊中,SR损伤的主要原因是集体或团队进行的体育活动/竞技运动。团队体育活动/竞技运动损伤的主要原因在男孩中是美式橄榄球,在女孩中是足球。被诊断为TBI的急诊就诊比例因年龄和性别而异,15 - 18岁青少年和男孩的人群发病率最高。
体育和娱乐活动是健康生活方式的重要组成部分,但也是学龄青少年受伤发病的主要来源。体育活动干预应考虑SR损伤风险中的性别和年龄差异。