PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 3 September 2001, p. e45
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
Rates of Pediatric and Adolescent Injuries by Year of Age
Received Dec 28, 2000; accepted Apr 17, 2001.
, and
From the * University of California, Center for Health Policy
and Research, Pediatric Injury Prevention Research Group, Irvine; and
Objective. The purpose of this study
was to analyze causes of injury hospitalization/death by individual
year of age and by specific causes of injury and to examine how well
aggregate age groups represented individual year-of-age rates.
Methods. Hospital discharge data and death certificate
data for California residents age 0 to 19 years with a principal
external cause of injury code (E-code) of E800 to E869, E880 to E929,
or E950 to E999, calendar year 1997, were analyzed. Annual rates of
injury hospitalization/death by year of age were calculated using
combined hospital discharges and deaths as the numerator for major
causes and important subcategories. For comparison, rates of injury
hospitalization/death were calculated for conventional vital statistics
age groups: <1 year, 1 to 4 years; 5 to 9 years, 10 to 14 years, and
15 to 19 years.
Results. In 1997 in California, 35 277 children and
adolescents 0 to 19 years were hospitalized and 1934 died as a result
of injury, a ratio of 17 hospitalizations to 1 death. The distribution
was bimodal with rates highest among 18-year-olds (732/100 000) and 1-year-olds (495/100 000). Except for children who were 5 to 9 years
of age, the group rates for all injuries were not reflective of the
individual year-of-age rates. In specific categories of injuries,
variation in rates by year of age were masked by age group rates for
unintentional poisoning among 1- to 4-year-olds, self-inflicted
poisoning for 10- to 19-year-olds, falls from playground equipment
among 5- to 9-year-olds, falls from furniture among 1- to 4-year-olds,
and motor vehicle occupant injury rates among 10- to 19-year-olds. The
peak rate of falls from playground equipment among 6-year-olds
(34/100 000) was more than twice the rate for 9-year-olds
(15/1000,000). Motor vehicle occupant injury rates doubled between 10 and 14 years of age and quadrupled between 14 and 18 years of age.
Conclusions. Analyses using conventional age groups did
not identify the age of highest risk for many causes of childhood
injury. Changes in the rates often transected the traditional age
groups and were not apparent with conventional age group analysis.
These data can inform on the age at which to begin a specific injury
intervention and on how to allocate resources. These data allow
pediatricians and other health professionals to be anticipatory in
providing injury prevention counseling. The greatest impact can be
achieved by making the counseling topic most age appropriate in
anticipation of the high-risk period.
Epidemiology and Prevention for Injury Control Branch, California
Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California.
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