Department of Psychiatry, Termerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Staff Psychiatrist, Canada; Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Canada.
Ontario Ministry of Transportation, Toronto, Canada.
Accid Anal Prev. 2021 Jul;157:106195. doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2021.106195. Epub 2021 May 18.
Older adults constitute the group most vulnerable to COVID-19 mortality. As a result, in North America and elsewhere, older adults have been strongly advised to shelter in place. Older adults also represent the fastest growing segment of licensed drivers.
We examined the change in injuries and fatalities sustained by younger and older drivers and pedestrians during the first month of the COVID-19 pandemic. We hypothesized that adults ages 80 years and over would have a proportionally larger reduction than the other drivers and pedestrians.
Using a cohort design, we compared the proportion of drivers and pedestrians involved in injuries and fatalities attributable to individuals aged 80 years and over, as recorded in the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (Canada) database, between the 30 days prior to shelter-in-place related to the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent 30 days. By way of comparison, we conducted a similar comparison for younger age cohorts (16-24 years, 25-34 years, 35-54 years, 55-64 years, and 65-79 years).
Drivers aged 80 years and over represented 21 per 1000 injuries and fatalities in the 30 days prior to March 17, 2020 (95 % CI: 15-29), and 8 per 1000 injuries and fatalities in the 30 days beginning on that date (95 % CI: 2-20), a 64.7 % reduction (exp (β) post 0.353, 95 % CI 0.105-0.892). Drivers in the 35-54 year age range underwent a significant but smaller reduction of 22.9 %; no significant changes were seen for drivers in other age groups, or for pedestrians of any age.
The physical distancing measures that aimed to reduce the spread of COVID-19 resulted in a marked reduction in driver injuries and fatalities in the oldest old, illustrating the impact of physical distancing recommendations in this population. The excess mortality burden faced by the oldest adults during the COVID-19 pandemic, by direct exposure to the virus, may be indirectly mitigated by the reduction in road-related deaths in this cohort.
老年人是 COVID-19 死亡率最高的人群。因此,在北美和其他地区,强烈建议老年人就地避难。老年人也是持照司机中增长最快的群体。
我们研究了 COVID-19 大流行的第一个月期间,年轻司机和行人受伤和死亡人数的变化。我们假设 80 岁及以上的成年人的比例会比其他司机和行人的比例更大。
我们使用队列设计,比较了安大略省交通部门(加拿大)数据库中记录的 80 岁及以上司机和行人因 COVID-19 大流行期间与就地避难相关的 30 天前和随后的 30 天内受伤和死亡归因于个人的比例。作为比较,我们对年龄较小的年龄组(16-24 岁、25-34 岁、35-54 岁、55-64 岁和 65-79 岁)进行了类似的比较。
80 岁及以上的司机在 2020 年 3 月 17 日前的 30 天内每 1000 人中有 21 人受伤和死亡(95%CI:15-29),而在该日期开始的 30 天内每 1000 人中有 8 人受伤和死亡(95%CI:2-20),减少了 64.7%(Exp(β)后 0.353,95%CI 0.105-0.892)。35-54 岁年龄组的司机经历了显著但较小的 22.9%的减少;其他年龄组的司机或任何年龄的行人没有出现显著变化。
旨在减少 COVID-19 传播的身体距离措施导致最年长的司机受伤和死亡人数明显减少,这说明了身体距离建议在该人群中的影响。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,由于直接接触病毒,最年长的成年人面临的超额死亡负担可能会因这一年龄组的道路相关死亡人数减少而间接减轻。