| Literature DB >> 19591670 |
Roxana Alexandrescu1, Sarah J O'Brien, Fiona E Lecky.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Serious injuries have been stated as a public health priority in the UK. However, there appears to be a lack of information on population-based rates of serious injury (as defined by a recognised taxonomy of injury severity) at national level from either official statistics or research papers. We aim to address this through a search and review of literature primarily focused within the UK and Europe.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19591670 PMCID: PMC2720963 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-9-226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Abdominal aorta injury description using ICD9, ICD10 and AIS90.
| ICD-9 | Abdominal Aorta Injury | 902.0 |
| ICD-10 | Injury of abdominal aorta | S35.0 |
| AIS90 | Aorta, Abdominal NFS (not further specified) | 520299. |
| intimal tear, no disruption | 520202. | |
| laceration (perforation, puncture) NFS | 520204. | |
| minor1 | 520206. | |
| major2 | 520208. |
1superficial, incomplete transection; incomplete circumferential involvement; blood loss ≤ 20% by volume
2 rupture, incomplete transection; segmental loss; complete circumferential involvement; blood loss ≥ 20% by volume
3 in italics the AIS score that allows computation of injury severity score
Epidemiological studies from the UK – childhood injuries
| Walsh et al., 1996 [ | descriptive (prospective) study/Coroner's files; Hospital data | children | deaths, hospitalization and A&E | proportions, rates by severity (ISS), type, cause; correlation A&E rates and Townsend score | 1990 6 deaths: 904 admissions: 11682 A&E | 1 year study and one geographical region. |
| Walsh & Jarvis, 1992 [ | descriptive (retrospective) study/Office for Population Censuses Surveys; Northern Regional Health Authority | sample children | deaths, hospitalization | proportions by type, cause; rates by severity (ISS), age, ward; correlation of rates by census ward, severity | 1980–1986 Relationship of injury admission rates, deaths and severity with deprivation, e.g. relative rate of deprived vs. affluent areas 2.4 (all injuries); 3.6 (severe injuries) | 96.4% of the hospitals admissions identified. |
| Armstrong & Robson, 1992 [ | descriptive study/Liverpool Coroner's Office data | children (0–16 y) | deaths | proportions by cause, circumstances | Highlights areas of prevention: 60% pedestrian RTC (1978–1987) – half pedestrians struck by vehicles | No population based rates; data on deaths only; one region |
| Hippisley-Cox | cross sectional survey/Trent NHS regional admissions database | children (0–14 y) | hospitalization | proportions by cause, age; rates by age, severity and deprivation; rate ratios for hospitals admissions | 1992–1997 socioeconomic gradients (particularly children under 5 y); adjusted rate ratio (fifth highest and lowest category by Townsend scores): 3.65 pedestrian; 3.49 burns & scalds | Data on severity based on health services use; one geographical region only |
| Laing & Logan, 1999 [ | descriptive study/A&E | children (0–14 y) | A&E | proportions and rates by age, gender, severity; correlation of Townsend score with A&E rates | 1992/1993 13820/100,000 annual attendance rate; socioeconomic gradients (even) within a disadvantaged population: a significant correlation between Townsend score and A&E attendance rate (p < 0.001) | 1 year study; 4 arbitrary categories of injury severity; codification – Home &Leisure Accident Surveillance |
| Edwards et al., 2008 [ | descriptive study/Hospital Episodes Statistics | children (0–15 y) | hospitalization | rates and proportions by cause, rate ratio by socio-economic classes, location, index of multiple deprivation, regression (injury rates- census variables) | 1999–2004 1340/100,000 all injury rates 15.8/100,000 serious injury rate; falls account for 36% and 41% of all/serious admissions; socio-economic gradients for serious injuries, e.g. RR = 4.1 pedestrian i and RR = 3.0 cyclists most vs. least deprived areas | Serious injury defined by six ICD groups (S72.0, S06.1–.9, S14, S22.4, T71, T68) |
| Avery et al., 1990 [ | descriptive study/Office for Population Censuses Surveys | children (0–14 y) | deaths | rates by geographical areas, trends and correlation of deprivation with deaths rates | 1975/1979 12.05/100,000; 1980/1984 10.33/100,000 geographical variations (higher urban vs. rural areas, NW vs. SE England); 1980–1984 socioeconomic gradients r = 0.56 for accidental deaths rate | Data on deaths only |
Epidemiological studies from the UK – childhood injuries
| Roberts et al., 1996 [ | descriptive study/Office for Population Censuses Surveys | children | deaths | rates by social class and cause; trends of mortality rates | 1979–83 to 1989–92 Social class gradients in mortality: 21% and 2% decline in social classes IV and V (47.5 to 37.8/100,000 and 84.7 to 82.9/100,000); 32% and 37% decline in social classes I and II (24.2 to 16.5/100,000 and 25.0 to 15.8/100,000) | Data on death only; missing data for 1981 |
| DiGuiseppi et al., 1997 [ | descriptive study/Office for National Statistics | children | deaths | proportions and trends of rates per mile travelled by age, gender, type road user | Travel patterns responsible for (34%) decline in children rates 1985–1992; declines in walking/cycling activities (37% and 38% declines pedestrian/cyclist rates) | Data on deaths only, focused on road traffic injuries; no population based rates for all injuries |
| Edwards et al., 2006 [ | descriptive study/Office for National Statistics | children | deaths | rates and proportions by socio-economic classes, year, 3 y average, cause | 1979–2003 Decline in death rates (per 100,000) from 11.1 (1979,1980, 1982) to 4.0 (2001–2003). Socio-economic gradients e.g. 13.1 times higher all external causes injury rates NSSEC* class 8 vs.1 | Data on deaths only; lack of 1980 injury deaths data |
| Lyons et al., 1995 [ | descriptive study/West Glamorgan injury database | children | A&E | proportions by place; rates and correlation of distance to A&E, no car and Townsend with rate ratio | 1993 18200 injuries/100,000 | Fractures as a proxy indicator for severe injuries – Nuffield Hospital Classification 1 year study |
| Graham et al., 2004 [ | descriptive (prospective) study/Crosshouse Hospital questionnaire data; Procurator Fiscal | children | deaths, hospitalization and A&E | proportions by type; rates of admissions by age | 1999/2000 5.6 hospital admissions per day Information on local injury data and preventive measures in use (cycle helmets used in 26% of cycle incidents; adult supervision in 49% of incidents) | No population based rates, no information on severity; 12.9% response rate |
| MacInnes & Stone 2008 [ | descriptive study/Royal Hospital Sick Children database | children (<7 y) | A&E | proportions by age, gender, location, circumstances, cause, type of injury; rates by age, gender, location | 1997–2001 14400/100,000 per year A&E attendance rate, peak values within 12–35 months; leading causes and types: 41% falls; 68% home location; 62% play related; 52% head injuries. | No information on severity; one geographical region only |
| Ness et al., 2002 [ | descriptive survey/Glasgow Royal Infirmary | children (13 y)/1493 Glasgow, Scotland | A&E | proportions by age, postcode – deprivation (Carstair Depcat) | 1990 injuries by type, location (facial laceration, radius/ulna fractures most frequently; 72% outside house); most of injured children come from highest area of deprivation | 53%questionnaire response rate; selection 10% of the questionnaires for analysis; study period – 3 months |
* National Statistics Socio-Economic Classification (NSSEC) is a new, occupational based classification that replaced starting with 2001 the social classes. The analytic eight class version is described as follows: 1 higher managerial and professional occupations, 2 lower managerial and professional occupations, 3 intermediate occupations, 4 small employers and own account workers, 5 lower supervisory and technical occupations, 6 semi-routine occupations, 7 routine occupations, 8 never worked, long term unemployed [41]
Epidemiological studies from the UK – injuries in young people
| Roberts et al., 1998 [ | analytical study/Office for National Statistics | children and teenagers | deaths | proportions by age, gender, type, cause, trends; rates by socio-economic classes, RR (manual/non-manual), correlation homicide and deaths of undetermined intent | 1980–1995 declining trends for unintentional injury (16 to 7/100,000) and no declining trends for intentional injury (2/100,000); socioeconomic gradients (e.g. homicide rate social class V is 17 times higher than for children social class I) | Data on deaths only |
| Roberts et al., 1998 [ | descriptive study/Office for National Statistics; NHS data | children and teenagers | deaths, hospitalization | proportions, rates by age and cause, trends of mortality rates and costs | 1992 8.6 deaths/100,000 (unintentional injuries); 1.2 deaths/100,000 (intentional) | Few data on morbidity – no population based rates |
| DiGuiseppi et al., 1998 [ | descriptive study/Office for National Statistics | teenagers | deaths | proportions and trends of rates per mile travelled by gender, type road user | Travel patterns responsible for (32%) decline in teenage rates 1985–1995; declines in motorcycling (12.1 to 2.5 boys; 1.4 to 0.0 girls), walking (3.2 to 2.1 boys; 1.8 to 0.6 girls) and cycling activities (1.7 to 1.1 boys; 0.4 to 0.1 girls) rates per 100,000 | Data on deaths only, focused on road traffic injuries; no population based rates for all injuries |
| Roberts et al., 1996 [ | analytic study | patients (0–24y)/3320 England, Wales, Northern Ireland | deaths, hospitalization | proportions by cause, type, severity (ISS ≥ 16), case fatality, trends in odds of death | 1989–1995 16% decline per year of odds of deaths; case fatality (ISS ≥ 16) 50 to 8.8% 0–4y; 29.5 to 16.2% 5–14y; 29.7 to 20.4% 15–24y.; role of hospital care in the reduction of trauma mortality in young people | Data on blunt trauma only; no population based rates; analysis focused on mortality (ISS ≥ 16); pre-hospital deaths not available |
Epidemiological studies from the UK and Ireland- injuries in the general population
| Gorman et al., 1999 [ | descriptive study/St John's hospital A&E data | general population/44224 | A&E | proportions by age, gender, type and location of injury; rates by age, gender, deprivation (Carstairs Depcat), eye injury data by location and type | 1995–1996 19620/100,000 attendance rate | No information on severity of injury; one geographical region |
| Cryer et al., 1996 [ | descriptive study/Office for Population Censuses Surveys; South East Thames Regional Health Authority hospital data | general population/3.67 million | deaths, hospitalization | proportions of deaths by injury location; rates by age, gender, cause, ICD code | A comprehensive picture (1988–1991) on the epidemiology of injury, priority setting | No information on severity; one geographical region |
| Gorman et al., 1995 [ | descriptive study/Coroner's data; Home Office data; A&E, ITU, theatre registers | general population/3.2 million | deaths, hospitalization and A&E | proportions and rates by age, cause, ISS, injury parameters (e.g., GCS, systolic blood pressure), hospital, outcome (died/alive) | A Level I Trauma Centre (American-style) might be not sustained by blunt injury incidence (ISS>15) in region i.e. 19/100,000 for patients arriving alive at hospital 1989/1990 | Only injuries ISS >15 |
| Lecky et al., 2000 [ | descriptive study/TARN | patients/91602 | deaths, hospitalization | proportions by cause, process of care (prehospital timing), trends in odds of deaths, Ws*, regression (odds of deaths – Revised Trauma Score, ISS) | 6% statistical significant gradual decline in case mix adjusted odds of deaths 1989–1997 | Trauma registry not whole population used as denominator; non-thermal blunt trauma; pre-hospital deaths not available |
| Lecky et al., 2002 [ | descriptive study/TARN | patients/129979 | deaths, hospitalization | proportions by age, gender, ISS, process of care (seniority of doctors), trends in odds of deaths, Ws*, regression (odds of deaths – Revised Trauma Score, ISS) | No significant change in case mix adjusted odds of death 1994–2000 (p = 0.35) | Trauma registry not whole population as denominator; non-thermal blunt trauma pre-hospital deaths not available |
*Ws provides a measure of excess survivors or deaths per 100 patients treated at each site (hospital)
Epidemiological studies from the UK and Ireland- injuries in the general population
| Lyons et al., 2003 [ | descriptive study/Patient Episode Database for Wales | general population/2.84 million | hospitalization | proportions by age, type, cause; crude and world standardised rates by age, cause, deprivation category (Townsend score), hospitalisation ratios | 1997–1999 | No information on severity of injury |
| McKee et al., 1990 [ | descriptive study/Hospital A&E data | sample of general population – one rural area Northern Ireland | A&E | rates; regression (A&E attendance – distance travelled, socio-economic variables) | 1986 22000/100,000 attendance rate | Extrapolation of results less likely, one geographical region |
| McNicholl & Cooke, | descriptive study/Northern Ireland hospitals records | general population/1 million | hospitalization | proportions and rates by age, gender, cause, diagnosis, process of care (surgical procedures), outcome (death, persistent vegetative state, severe/moderate disability, good recovery) | 1990/1991 | 1 year only study, only injuries ISS>15 (excludes pre-hospital deaths) |
| Boland et al., 2005 [ | descriptive study/Central Office Statistics; | general population | deaths, hospitalization | proportions, standardised mortality and admission ratios by cause, age, gender, urban vs. rural | 1980–2000/1993–2000 | No information on severity |
| Scallan et al., 2004 [ | descriptive study/Central Statistics Office; | general population | deaths, hospitalization | proportions and rates by cause, type | Highlights the importance of using morbidity (1993–1997, 1239.9/100,000) & mortality (1980–1996, 31.6/100,000) data on a complementary way; | Morbidity and mortality data cover different time periods; unintentional injuries |
Epidemiological studies from Europe – childhood and teen injuries
| Brudvik., 2000 [ | descriptive study/Haukeland University Discharge Register | children<16y/227250 | hospitalization and A&E | proportions by gender, body region, cause, circumstances of injury; rates by age, cause | 1998 Annual injury incidence 9% preschool children/13% school children | No information on severity; |
| Mattila et al., 2005 [ | descriptive study/Finnish Official Cause of Death Statistics | adolescents (10–19y)/0.8 million (1971) - | deaths | proportions and rates by age, gender, year, trends of mortality rates | 1971–2002 decline in death rates from 43.0 to 19.9 per 100,000; decline in RTC; no changes in intentional deaths | Data on deaths only |
| Parkkari et al., 2000 [ | descriptive study/Finnish Official Cause of Death Statistics; National Hospital Discharge Register | children | deaths, hospitalization | rates and proportions by age, gender, cause type, year; trends of incidence and mortality rates | 1971–1995 decline of incidence fatal injury rates (per 100,000): 20.1 to 4.6 (girls)/36.7 to 9.3 (boys); 1995 causes of deaths: 41% RTC, 24% intentional injuries, 12% drowning; little change non-fatal injuries rates | No information on severity; serious injuries defined by those requiring hospitalisation |
| Stefansdottir & Mogensen, 1997 [ | descriptive (retrospective) study/Reykjavik City Hospital data | children | deaths, hospitalization and A&E | proportions by age; rates by age, gender and trends of incidence rates | 1974–1991 | No information on severity; one geographical region only |
| van der Voorde et al., 2008 | descriptive study/PaEdiatric Network around Trauma | children | deaths, | proportions by age, gender, cause, severity (ISS), type, body region, location and injury circumstances, process of care (e.g., waiting time); rates by cause | 2005 | No population based rates of major trauma (ISS>15), 'severe trauma' defined by length of hospital stay>48 hours, including all non-survivors, 1 year study, and one geographical region only; analysis based on 21.9% sample |
Epidemiological studies from Europe – childhood and teen injuries
| Borzecky et al., 2002 [ | descriptive study/Surgical Ward of Specialist Paediatric Hospital Kielce data | children | hospitalization | proportions by age, gender, cause, location, urban/rural, time of occurrence | 1997/1998 | No population based rates, no information on severity; 1 year study and one geographical region only |
| Oprescu et al., 2008 [ | analytic study/Children Clinical Hospital data | children | A&E | proportions by age, gender, type, cause, ethnic status, location, process of care (e.g. waiting time), OR (injury type/age, gender, location); rates by age | 1999–2003 | No information on severity; one geographical region only; non-fatal injuries |
| Petridou et al., 2001 [ | analytic study/Emergency Department Injury Surveillance System | children | A&E | proportions by age, gender, type, circumstances of injury, process of care (e.g. treatment), rates and regression (OR intentional vs. non-intentional -socio-demographic variables, injury details) | 1996–1997 | No population based rates for un-intentional injuries |
| Petridou et al., 2005 [ | analytic | children | hospitalization, A&E and other sources – police, health care outlets) | proportions, rates by severity (ISS), age, gender; OR, regression (OR injury – socio-demographic and somatometric variables) | 1994/1995 28.2 per 100 person year overall incidence rate; 6.3 per 100 person year incidence rate (ISS>4) | 1 year study and one geographical region only |
Epidemiological studies from Europe – injuries in the general population
| van der Sluis et al., 1996 [ | descriptive study/University Hospital Groningen data | youth (20–29 y) and elderly (>60 y) | hospitalization | proportions by severity (ISS), age, gender, cause, body region, process of care (e.g. length of stay), outcome (disability, died, vegetative state) | 1985–1990 (injuries ISS ≥ 16) RTC leading cause 76.6 vs. 79.3% young vs. elderly; 19.6 vs. 38.8% mortality in young vs. elderly patients | No population based rates; only injuries ISS ≥ 16 |
| van Beeck | descriptive study/Road Traffic Accident Registry; Occupational Registry; National Medical Registry; Dutch Central Bureau of Statistics | general population | deaths, hospitalization and A&E | proportions and rates by cause, location, trends of crude/standardized mortality, incidence and case-fatality rates, exposure/injury risk | 1950–1995 (several data sources) | Injury severity defined by case fatality within broad classes, e.g. intracranial injuries; internal injuries organs in the chest |
| Kannus et al., 2001 [ | descriptive study/National Hospital Discharge Register | adults (>15 y)/5 million | hospitalization | proportions and rates crude/standardized by gender, cause, mechanism, trends of incidence rates | Changes in the profile of injury (1971–1995) with falls as the leading cause for both men and women | No information on severity; serious injuries defined by those requiring hospitalisation |
| Kannus et al., 2005 [ | descriptive study/Finnish Official Cause of Death Statistics | adults (>15 y)/3.5 million (1971) | deaths | rates crude/standardized by age, gender, cause, trends of mortality rates | Changes in the unintentional injury deaths (1971–2003) with falls replacing RTC as the leading cause | Data on deaths only; unintentional injuries |
| Sahlin et al., 1990 [ | descriptive study/Trondheim hospital records and questionnaire data; general practice data | general population | hospitalization general practitioners visits | proportions by severity (AIS code, 1976), body region, location; rates by age, gender, type | 1985/1986 incidence rate 11400 per 100,000 persons; 0.4% of all injury – fatal; 9% of all injury – hospitalised | 1 year study and one geographical region only |
Epidemiological studies from Europe – injuries in the general population
| Ekman et al., 2007 [ | descriptive study/National Statistical Offices; WHO database | general population/98150 Sweden (Boras); 65841 Latvia (Jelgava); 378913 Lithuania (Kaunas); 101140 Estonia (Tartu) | deaths | rates by gender, crude and standardized, yearly, 3 y average; trends of mortality rates | 1990–2002 mortality rates per 100,000: 38 (Boras)/101 (Tartu)/112 (Jelgava)/126 (Kaunas); stable trends in Sweden, increasing rates until 1994, seamed to stabilized after 1997 in Baltic communities; higher rates in males vs. females and in age group under 65 y old in the Baltic communities than in Boras, Sweden. | Data on death only |
| Buschmann et al., 2008 [ | descriptive study/German trauma registry | general population | deaths, | proportions by age, gender, body region, cause, process of care (e.g., length of stay) outcome (died/alive) | 1997–2003 | No population based rates, only injuries ISS>16; data focused on children |
| Tiret et al., 1989 [ | descriptive study/Hospitals data; deaths certificates | general population/2.7 million | deaths, hospitalization | proportions by severity (ISS), cause, type, outcome (eight days still hospitalised/died in hospital); rates by age, gender, cause; non-fatal/fatal rate ratio | 1985/1986 | 1 year study and one administrative region only |
| Di Bartolomeo | descriptive | general population/1.2 million | deaths, hospitalization | proportions by age, gender, cause, severity (ISS), process of care (e.g., timing), outcome (died/alive), rates by severity | 1998/1999 238 per mil per year mortality rate; 522 per mil per year incidence rate for severe injuries (ISS>15 & pre-hospital deaths); 98.2% blunt injury | Only injuries ISS >15; 1 year study and one geographical region only (excludes self inflicted injuries) |
| Plasencia & Borell | cross sectional survey/A&E Hospitals questionnaire data; City Death Registry | adults (>14 y)/1.7 million Barcelona; 6 million Catalonia, Spain | deaths, hospitalization and A&E | proportions by age, gender, cause, severity (ISS), type, location; rates age, gender, cause, location; case admission ratio | 1990/1991 | No population based rates of major trauma (ISS>15, 1 year study, and one geographical region only; analysis based on extrapolated data on injuries |
| Petridou et al., 2004 [ | descriptive study/Questionnaire data; A&E Injury Surveillance System | adults (>15 y) | hospitalisation, A&E | proportions by age, gender, type; rates by gender, event timing (injury in relation to the interview date) | 2001 5.9 per 100 person-year incidence reported within a survey vs. 12.9 per 100 person-year incidence reported from the surveillance system | Major injuries defined as those requiring health care; 1 y study |
International comparisons of injury population – based rates of major trauma
| Walsh et al. | 0.05* | Newcastle upon Tyne, UK/1990 | N | Y | Injuries ISS>8 | 430 |
| Petridou et al.2005 [ | 0.001** | Velestino, Greece/1994–1995 | N | Y | Injuries ISS>4 | 6300 |
| Gorman et al. | 3.2 | Mersey Region and North Wales, UK/1989–1990 | N | N | Blunt injuries ISS>15 | 19.0 |
| McNicholl & Cooke 1995 [ | 1.5 | Northern Ireland/1990–1991 | N | N | Injuries ISS>15 | 23.2 |
| Di Bartolomeo et al. | 1.2 | Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy/1998–1999 | N | Y | Injuries ISS>15 | 52.2 |
| Demetriades et al. | 9.4 | Los Angeles, USA/1996 | Y | Y | All trauma cases in the registry | 151.0 |
| Potenza et al. 2004 [ | 2.6 | San Diego, USA/1987–1997 | Y | Y | All trauma cases in the registry | 195.0 |
| Karmali et al. 2005 [ | > 1*** | Calgary, Canada/1999–2002 | N | Y | Injuries ISS>12 | 71.5 |
| Cameron et al. 1995 [ | 4.2 | Victoria, Australia/1992–1993 | N | N | Injuries ISS>15 | 25.6 |
*children <16 y; **children<14 y;*** adults ≥ 16 y