Burden of Disease Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa.
Division of Public Health Medicine, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Glob Health Action. 2024 Dec 31;17(1):2377828. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2024.2377828. Epub 2024 Aug 15.
Injuries, often preventable, prompted urgent action within the United Nations' 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to improve global health. South Africa (SA) has high rates of injury mortality, but accurate reporting of official national data is hindered by death misclassification.
Two nationally representative surveys for 2009 and 2017 are utilised to assess SA's progress towards SDG targets for violence and road traffic injuries, alongside changes in suicide and under-5 mortality rates for childhood injuries, and compare these estimates with those of the Global Burden of Disease for SA.
The surveys utilised multi-stage, stratified cluster sampling from eight provinces, with mortuaries as primary sampling units. Post-mortem files for non-natural deaths were reviewed, with additional data from the Western Cape. Age-standardised rates, 95% confidence intervals (CIs), and incidence rate ratios (IRRs) were calculated for manner of death rate comparisons and for age groups.
The all-injury age-standardised mortality rate decreased significantly between 2009 and 2017. Homicide and transport remained the leading causes of injury deaths, with a significant 31% decrease in road traffic mortality (IRR = 0.69), from 36.1 to 25.0 per 100 000 population.
Despite a reduction in SA's road traffic mortality rate, challenges to achieve targets related to young and novice drivers and male homicide persist. Achieving SA's injury mortality SDG targets requires comprehensive evaluations of programmes addressing road safety, violence reduction, and mental well-being. In the absence of reliable routine data, survey data allow to accurately assess the country's SDG progress through commitment to evidence-based policymaking.
在联合国 2030 年可持续发展目标议程中,伤害(往往是可以预防的)促使采取紧急行动,以改善全球健康状况。南非(SA)的伤害死亡率很高,但由于死亡分类不当,准确报告国家官方数据受到阻碍。
利用 2009 年和 2017 年的两项全国代表性调查,评估南非在实现可持续发展目标中针对暴力和道路交通伤害的目标方面的进展情况,以及儿童伤害的自杀和 5 岁以下儿童死亡率的变化情况,并将这些估计与南非全球疾病负担进行比较。
调查采用多阶段、分层聚类抽样方法,从八个省份抽取样本,以太平间为初级抽样单位。对非自然死亡的尸检档案进行了审查,并从西开普省获得了额外的数据。对死因率比较和年龄组计算了年龄标准化率、95%置信区间(CI)和发病率比(IRR)。
2009 年至 2017 年间,全伤年龄标准化死亡率显著下降。凶杀和交通仍然是伤害死亡的主要原因,道路交通死亡率显著下降 31%(IRR=0.69),从每 10 万人 36.1 人降至 25.0 人。
尽管南非的道路交通死亡率有所下降,但在实现与年轻和新手司机以及男性凶杀相关的目标方面仍面临挑战。要实现南非的伤害死亡率可持续发展目标,需要对道路安全、减少暴力和心理健康等方面的方案进行全面评估。在缺乏可靠常规数据的情况下,调查数据通过承诺循证决策,使我们能够准确评估该国在可持续发展目标方面的进展情况。