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Journal Article

Citation

Bilston LE, Brown J. Inj. Prev. 2008; 14(1): 46-50.

Affiliation

Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute, Univ of NSW, Randwick, NSW, Australia; (L.Bilston@unsw.edu.au)

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/ip.2007.017616

PMID

18245315

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To correlate the accuracy of information on children's restraint usage and crash characteristics recorded with medical data using in-depth crash investigation. Restraint and crash information within the medical and ambulance records is often available, but information on the accuracy of this data is limited. METHODS: Comparison of restraint and crash characteristic data from medical and ambulance records with that obtained from in-depth crash investigation studies, for a case series of child occupants aged 2-8 years involved in motor vehicle crashes. RESULTS: When restraint type, seating position, impact severity, and impact direction data were recorded in either the medical record or ambulance records, it tended to be at least partially correct. However, incompleteness or absence of specifics of restraint use and crash information in the medical record (7-17%) was common. Ambulance records were often not available (39%), but this data was more often complete (78-100%) and accurate (52-89%), when available, possibly due to the use of a standardized pro-forma. CONCLUSIONS: Ambulance and hospital records data can provide information on restraint type and usage for child occupants in motor vehicle crashes, as well as crash information. The use of a standardized pro-forma may encourage more complete and accurate reporting of restraint and crash data.


Language: en

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