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Journal Article

Citation

Thompson AH, Borden K, Belton KL. Crisis 2004; 25(4): 156-160.

Affiliation

Alberta Center for Injury Control and Research, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada. gus.thompson@ualberta.ca

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, International Association for Suicide Prevention, Publisher Hogrefe Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15580850

Abstract

The growing practice of including intentional injuries (suicide and interpersonal violence) under the injury control umbrella has produced some controversy. The present study was designed to determine whether or not there might be an empirical basis for this initiative from an ecological point of view by examining the associations among unintentional and intentional injuries across 17 geographically defined health regions. The study was set in the Province of Alberta, Canada, where health services were delivered to a population of 2.96 million persons in 1999 through 17 regional health authorities. The results of a principal components analysis showed that nearly all causes of injury-hospitalization loaded on a single factor. It was not possible to produce separate factors for intentional and unintentional injuries. The strong intercorrelation among all measures suggests that there is an empirical basis for the view that intentional and unintentional injuries belong under the same conceptual umbrella, at least at the ecological level.

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