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Journal Article

Citation

Herbert A, Gilbert R, Gonzalez-Izquierdo A, Li L. BMJ Open 2015; 5(2): e006079.

Affiliation

Population, Policy & Practice Programme, University College London Institute of Child Health, London, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/bmjopen-2014-006079

PMID

25667148

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Of adolescents in the general population in England, we aimed to determine (1) the proportion that has an emergency admission to hospital for injury related to adversity (violence, self-harm or drug or alcohol misuse) and (2) the risk of recurrent emergency admissions for injury in adolescents admitted with adversity-related injury compared with those admitted with accident-related injury only.

DESIGN: We used longitudinally linked administrative hospital data (Hospital Episode Statistics) to identify participants aged 10-19 years with emergency admissions for injury (including day cases lasting more than 4 h) in England in 1998-2011. We used the Office for National Statistics mid-year estimates for population denominators.

RESULTS: Approximately 4.3% (n=141 248) of adolescents in the general population (n=3 254 046) had one or more emergency admissions for adversity-related injury (girls 4.6%, boys 4.1%), accounting for 50% of all emergency admissions for injury in girls and 29.1% in boys. Admissions for self-harm or drug or alcohol misuse commonly occurred in the same girls and boys. Recurrent emergency admissions for injury were more common in adolescents with adversity-related injury (girls 17.3%, boys 16.5%) than in those with accident-related injury only (girls 4.7%, boys 7.4%), particularly for adolescents with adversity-related injury related to multiple types of adversity (girls 21.1%, boys 24.2%).

CONCLUSIONS: Hospital-based interventions should be developed to reduce the risk of future injury in adolescents admitted for adversity-related injury.


Language: en

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