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Journal Article

Citation

Ma W, Nie S, Xu H, Xu Y, Xie H. Biomed. Environ. Sci. 2011; 24(4): 335-342.

Affiliation

Guangdong Institute of Public health, Guangzhou 510300, Guangdong, China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention and Chinese Academy of Preventive Medicine, Publisher Academic Press)

DOI

10.3967/0895-3988.2011.04.003

PMID

22108321

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the epidemiological characteristics of nonfatal child pedestrian injuries and provide information to help understand an important public-health problem. METHODS: This was a school-based, cross-sectional questionnaire survey. The sample (42 750 children) was obtained from two urban cities of Guangdong Province, China, using multi-stage randomized sampling. Information was collected by the respondents self-reporting in the classroom. RESULTS: The incidence rate of nonfatal child pedestrian injuries in the cities was 2.0%. Boys had a higher incidence rate (2.6%) than girls (1.4%). Compared to other children, those aged 10 years are at the highest risk. The primary places of occurrence were sidewalks, residential roads, and crosswalks. High-risk behavior of the children immediately prior to injury included mid-block crossings, playing on roads, and crossing on red lights. The major vehicles that caused pedestrian injuries were bicycles, car or vans, and motorcycles. Bruises, fractures, and injuries to the internal organs were the top three types of injuries. Almost 40% of victims were hospitalized, and nearly 30% of the victims suffered long-term disabilities. CONCLUSION: This study shows that nonfatal child pedestrian injuries are a very serious public-health problem in the urban cities of Guangdong. Based on the epidemiological characteristics, prevention strategies and further research should be carried out to reduce the occurrence of injuries.


Language: en

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