Adolescent injury mortality in New Zealand and opportunities for prevention | Safekids NZ

 

 
  

Adolescent injury mortality in New Zealand and opportunities for prevention

Injury is recognised internationally as the major threat to adolescent health. The purpose of this study was to describe the epidemiology of adolescent fatal injury in New Zealand, and to examine opportunities for prevention. National mortality data were searched to identify all 15-19 year-olds, who died from injuries in the period 1986-1995. Leading causes of injury were reviewed in light of known risk factors, injury mortality rates in other industrialised countries, and available prevention strategies. The results showed that injury accounted for 2,095 deaths (72.8 per 100,000 person years.) Males comprised 77% of all victims, and there was a three-fold increase in mortality from age 15 to 19 years. The leading causes of death were road traffic crashes, suicide, and unintentional drowning. The Graduated Driver Licensing System addresses a range of risk factors for adolescent road traffic crashes. Despite inadequate enforcement, early indications are that it has yielded modest reductions in injury. Hazardous drinking is implicated in the high rates of road traffic crashes and drownings, and given recent liberalisation of supply-side policies, proactive identification of hazardous drinkers followed by brief intervention holds promise as a prevention measure. Suicide accounts for an increasing rate of adolescent deaths in New Zealand. The effect of national policies to address a range of suicide risk factors remains to be fully evaluated.

Record #:
5802
Date:
2002
Format:
Journal Article
Author:
Kypri, Kypros;Chalmers, David J.;Langley, John D.
Corp:
Injury Prevention Research Unit (IPRU)
Source:
International Journal of Adolescent Medicine and Health
Citation:
14(1)02
Issue pages:
27-41
Keywords:
DATA;STATISTICS;ADOLESCENCE;ALL INJURIES;ROAD TRAFFIC CRASHES;DROWNING;SUICIDE
Identity:
NZ
Location:
f
Class:
C400

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