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Journal Article

Citation

Chang A, Lugg MM, Nebedum A. Pediatrics 1989; 83(2): 272-277.

Affiliation

Division of Population, School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles 90024.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1989, American Academy of Pediatrics)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2783627

Abstract

In this study, 423 injury incidents among preschool children enrolled in day-care centers reported to the Los Angeles Unified School District during the 2-year period 1983 to 1984 are reviewed. The relative risk of sustaining an injury between boys and girls was 1.5:1. Among sex and age groups, younger boys (2 to 3 years of age) showed the highest injury rate and older girls (4 to 5 years of age) showed the lowest. The overall incidence was 19.7 injuries per 1,000 child-years. The majority of the injuries were minor in severity, and medical attention was recommended in only 12.8% of the injuries. The highest incidence occurred during the late morning period (9 AM to 12 noon). A consumer product was involved in 53.7% of the incidents. Three of four injuries were considered preventable by training and/or education or by the Haddon injury reduction strategies. Additional prospective studies are needed to develop and implement preventive measures.


Language: en

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