Mahboob Afifa, Richmond Sarah A, Harkins Joshua P, Macpherson Alison K
School of Kinesiology and Health Science, Faculty of Health, York University, Toronto, Ontario.
Health Promotion, Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Public Health Ontario, Toronto, Ontario.
Paediatr Child Health. 2019 Nov 29;26(1):e39-e45. doi: 10.1093/pch/pxz145. eCollection 2021 Feb.
Unintentional injuries represent a substantial public health burden among children and adolescents, and previous evidence suggests that there are disparities in injury by socioeconomic status (SES). This paper reports on a systematic review of literature on injury rates among children and adolescents by measures of SES.
A systematic literature search was conducted using six electronic databases: MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, HealthSTAR, EMBASE, and SportsDiscus. This review considered children ages 19 years and under and publications between 1997 and 2017-representing an update since the last systematic review examined this specific question. Fifty-four articles were summarized based on study and participant descriptions, outcome and exposure, statistical tests used, effect estimates, and overall significance.
Most articles addressed risk factors across all injury mechanisms; however, some focused particularly on burns/scalds, road traffic injuries, falls/drowning cases, and playground/sports injuries. Other studies reported on specific injury types including traumatic dental injuries, traumatic brain injuries, and fractures. The studies were of moderate quality, with a median of 15.5 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 15.34 to 15.66) out of 19. Thirty-two studies found an inverse association between SES and childhood unintentional injury, three found a positive association while twenty were not significant or failed to report effect measures.
Given the variability in definition of the exposure (SES) and outcome (injury), the results of this review were mixed; however, the majority of studies supported a relationship between low SES and increased injury risk. Public health practice must consider SES, and other measures of health equity, in childhood injury prevention programming, and policy.
意外伤害是儿童和青少年面临的一项重大公共卫生负担,先前的证据表明,意外伤害存在社会经济地位(SES)差异。本文报告了一项关于按SES衡量的儿童和青少年伤害率的文献系统综述。
使用六个电子数据库进行系统的文献检索:医学文献数据库(MEDLINE)、心理学文摘数据库(PsycINFO)、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)、健康之星数据库(HealthSTAR)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(EMBASE)和体育与运动医学数据库(SportsDiscus)。本综述纳入19岁及以下儿童以及1997年至2017年期间的出版物,这是对上一次针对该特定问题进行的系统综述的更新。根据研究和参与者描述、结果与暴露情况、所使用的统计检验、效应估计以及总体显著性,对54篇文章进行了总结。
大多数文章探讨了所有伤害机制的危险因素;然而,一些文章特别关注烧伤/烫伤、道路交通伤害、跌倒/溺水案例以及游乐场/运动伤害。其他研究报告了特定的伤害类型,包括外伤性牙损伤、创伤性脑损伤和骨折。这些研究质量中等,在19分的总分中中位数为15.5(95%置信区间[CI]:15.34至15.66)。32项研究发现SES与儿童意外伤害之间存在负相关,3项发现正相关,20项不显著或未报告效应量。
鉴于暴露(SES)和结果(伤害)定义的变异性,本综述结果不一;然而,大多数研究支持低SES与伤害风险增加之间的关系。公共卫生实践在儿童伤害预防规划和政策中必须考虑SES以及其他健康公平指标。