Unintentional injury mortality in children: a priority for middle income countries in the advanced stage of epidemiological transition

the objective of this study was to examine the relationship between the magnitude, and the relative importance of unintentional child injury mortality with socioeconomic development, and to conceptualise the dynamic changes in injury mortality within the framework of epidemiological transition. This was an ecological cross sectional study using data on 51 countries. The main outcome measures were the relationship between total mortality rates, unintentional injury mortality rates, and percentage in children 1–14 years of age with gross national product (GNP) per capita. Results showed that unintentional injury mortality rates in children were negatively correlated with GNP per capita. However, by categorising the data, we found some areas of non-correlation: in children 5–14 years in low income versus lower middle income countries, and in all age and gender groups in lower high income versus higher high income countries. A high percentage of total deaths due to injuries was clearest in the lower middle income countries in all age and gender groups. In conclusion, the changes in child injury mortality in relation to socioeconomic development could be conceptualised as three stages: a stage of high magnitude; a stage of high priority; and a stage of improvement. Most middle income countries are in the high priority stage where both injury mortality rates and injury percentage of total deaths are high.

Record #:
6579
Date:
1999
Format:
Journal Article
Author:
Plitponkarnpim, Adisak et al.
Corp:
Karolinska Institute, Department of Public Health Sciences, Division of Social Medicine, Stockholm, Sweden
Source:
Injury Prevention
Citation:
5(2)99
Keywords:
SOCIOECONOMICS;SOCIOECONOMIC FACTORS;RISK FACTORS;COMPARATIVE STUDY;INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS;CHILD MORTALITY;SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS;DEVELOPING COUNTRIES;SOCIOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Identity:
SWE
Location:
p
Class:
C620

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