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Journal Article

Citation

Bougie E, Fines P, Oliver LN, Kohen DE. Health Rep. 2014; 25(2): 3-12.

Affiliation

Health Analysis Division, Statistics Canada, Ottawa, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Statistics Canada)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

24567245

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Few national studies of hospitalizations due to injuries among the First Nations population have been conducted. DATA AND METHODS: Based on 2004/2005 to 2009/2010 data from the Discharge Abstract Database, this study examines associations between unintentional injury hospitalizations, socio-economic status and location relative to an urban core in Dissemination Areas (DAs) with a high percentage of First Nations identity residents versus a low percentage of Aboriginal identity residents. RESULTS: Unintentional injury hospitalization rates were higher in the less affluent and the most remote DAs. When DAs with the same socio-economic status and location were compared, the risk of hospitalizations was greater in high-percentage First Nations identity DAs relative to low-percentage Aboriginal identity DAs. INTERPRETATION: Socio-economic conditions and remote location accounted for some, but not all, of the differences in unintentional injury hospitalizations between high-percentage First Nations identity and low-percentage Aboriginal identity DAs. This suggests that characteristics not measured in this analysis-such as environmental, behavioural or other factors-play an additional role in DA-level unintentional injury hospitalization risk.


Language: en

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