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Journal Article

Citation

Hu H, Gao J, Jiang H, Xing P. Int. J. Equity Health 2018; 17(1): 47.

Affiliation

School of Humanities and Social Sciences, North China Electric Power University, No.689, Huadian Road, Lianchi District, Baoding, Hebei, 071003, People's Republic of China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/s12939-018-0767-3

PMID

29685156

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Children who suffer from parental migration have been manifested to exhibit physical and mental impairments at higher rates. This current study aims to explore unintentional injury disparity among schooling left-behind children, migrant children and residential children in China, and to examine the risk factors of unintentional injury among the three types of children based on a multi-level system framework. This study will fill the gaps of this topic for China and contribute to the world literature in the context of countries with frequent population migration.

METHODS: Data for 4479 children aged 6-16 of a representative population sample were obtained from a survey conducted in China in 2017. Child's unintentional injury in this survey was measured based on the definition and classification of ICD-10. Descriptive analysis, multivariable logistic regression and zero-inflated negative binomial regression were employed in this study.

RESULTS: Left-behind children showed higher prevalence of total unintentional injury than migrant and residential children, as well as in 14 specific unintentional injuries. There was a statistical difference between left-behind and residential children's unintentional injuries, but no significant difference was found between migrant and residential children.

RESULTS also indicated that both individual and environmental factors constructed as a multi-level system were associated with children's unintentional injuries.

CONCLUSIONS: Family migration may have contributed to the increased unintentional injury risks among children. Left-behind children were more vulnerable to suffer from unintentional injuries than migrant and residential children, and specific attentions should be paid to unique group of children, especially the left-behind children. Given the importance and serious consequences of children's unintentional injuries, the findings may provide implications for necessary intervention.


Language: en

Keywords

Family migration; Left-behind children; Migrant children; Risk factor; Unintentional injury

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