Barker M, Power C
Wolfson Child Health Monitoring Unit, Division of Public Health: Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Child Health, London.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 1993 Oct;47(5):349-54. doi: 10.1136/jech.47.5.349.
To describe the prevalence of disability in young adults and estimate the contribution that injuries make to disability.
The study uses data from a British longitudinal survey, the National Child Development Study (1958 cohort). Disability at age 23 was ascertained from three questions asked in an interview with cohort members in 1981: these related to longstanding illness that limits activity, permanent disability following an accident after age 16, and registered disability. Lower and upper estimates of the contribution of injuries to disability were derived from ICD-9 codes allocated to the disabilities.
These comprised 12,537 subjects, representing 76% of the target population, cohort members still alive and resident in Britain in 1981.
Prevalence of disability according to the three definitions was: 46 per 1000 with limiting longstanding illness; 28 per 1000 with a permanent accident related disability of onset after age 16; and 10 per 1000 registered disabled. Combining all three definitions, the overall prevalence of disability was 68 per 1000, with men reporting more disability than women. It was estimated that an injury caused the disability for 16.7% of subjects, at the lower estimate, and 26.0% at the upper estimate (23.1% to 32.1% for men and 8.6% to 18.4% for women). For limiting longstanding illness of onset after 16, between 33.5% and 47.8% was due to an injury. Road accidents caused 31% of permanent accident related disability. Over one half of men and nearly three quarters of women reporting permanent accident related disability had not been admitted to hospital for their injury.
Injuries are an important cause of disability in young adults, particularly injuries resulting from accidents after age 16. Accident prevention in the 16-24 group has the potential to reduce the prevalence of disability substantially.
描述年轻成年人的残疾患病率,并估算伤害对残疾的影响程度。
本研究使用了英国一项纵向调查——全国儿童发展研究(1958年队列)的数据。1981年通过对队列成员进行访谈时提出的三个问题来确定23岁时的残疾情况:这些问题涉及限制活动的长期疾病、16岁以后因事故导致的永久性残疾以及登记残疾情况。根据分配给残疾情况的国际疾病分类第九版(ICD - 9)编码得出伤害对残疾影响程度的下限和上限估计值。
包括12537名研究对象,占目标人群的76%,即1981年仍在世且居住在英国的队列成员。
根据三种定义得出的残疾患病率分别为:每1000人中有46人患有限制活动的长期疾病;每1000人中有28人患有16岁以后因事故导致的永久性残疾;每1000人中有10人登记为残疾。综合所有三种定义,残疾的总体患病率为每1000人中有68人,男性报告的残疾情况多于女性。据估计,伤害导致残疾的比例下限为16.7%,上限为26.0%(男性为23.1%至32.1%,女性为8.6%至18.4%)。对于16岁以后发病的限制活动的长期疾病,33.5%至47.8%是由伤害导致的。道路交通事故导致31%的因事故导致的永久性残疾。报告因事故导致永久性残疾的男性中,超过一半以及女性中近四分之三受伤后未住院治疗。
伤害是年轻成年人残疾的一个重要原因,尤其是16岁以后因事故导致的伤害。在16 - 24岁人群中预防事故有可能大幅降低残疾患病率。