| Literature DB >> 23705679 |
Marcia Schmertmann1, Ann Williamson, Deborah Black, Leigh Wilson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Unintentional poisoning in young children is an important public health issue. Age pattern studies have demonstrated that children aged 1-3 years have the highest levels of poisoning risk among children aged 0-4 years, yet little research has been conducted regarding risk factors specific to this three-year age group and the methodologies employed varied greatly. The purpose of the current study is to investigate a broad range of potential risk factors for unintentional poisoning in children aged 1-3 years using appropriate methodologies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23705679 PMCID: PMC3682908 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-13-88
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Figure 1Schematic of risk factors investigated for unintentional poisoning in children aged 1–3 years.
Socio-demographic variables for poisoning cases and injury, sick and healthy controls
| | | | | | |
| Birth order | First | 8 (89) | 15 (42) | 30 (83) | 19 (53) |
| | Second | 0 (0) | 18 (50) | 5 (14) | 15 (42) |
| | Third or later | 1 (11) | 3 (8) | 1 (3) | 2 (6) |
| Number of hours in child care per week (both in and outside home) | | 16 (0–50) | 15.5 (0–40) | 18 (0–49) | 24.5 (0–54) |
| | | | | | |
| Age | | 37 (25–46) | 36 (23–46) | 35.5 (22–43) | 38 (29–45) |
| Marital status | Married/living with partner | 8 (89) | 32 (89) | 30 (83) | 34 (94) |
| | Single (never married, separated, divorced) | 1 (11) | 4 (11) | 6 (17) | 2 (6) |
| Highest education level | Year 12 equivalent or below | 0 (0) | 6 (17) | 4 (11) | 4 (11) |
| | University degree or other technical qualifications | 6 (67) | 19 (53) | 21 (58) | 16 (44) |
| | Postgraduate studies | 3 (33) | 11 (31) | 11 (31) | 16 (44) |
| Country of birth | Australia | 7 (78) | 26 (72) | 22 (61) | 25 (69) |
| | Not Australia | 2 (22) | 10 (28) | 14 (39) | 11 (31) |
| Language spoken at home | English | 9 (100) | 36 (100) | 35 (97) | 34 (94) |
| | Not English | | | 1 (3) | 2 (6) |
| Employed outside home | Yes | 7 (78) | 20 (56) | 22 (61) | 32 (89) |
| No | 2 (22) | 16 (44) | 14 (39) | 4 (11) | |
| If employed outside home, mother works full-time (>35 hrs/wk) | Yes | 2 (29) | 3 (15) | 4 (18) | 4 (13) |
| No | 5 (71) | 17 (85) | 18 (82) | 28 (88) | |
| Smokes cigarettes | Yes | 0 (0) | 2 (6) | 2 (6) | 3 (8) |
| No | 9 (100) | 34 (94) | 34 (94) | 33 (92) | |
| Drinks alcohol | Yes | 7 (78) | 29 (81) | 25 (69) | 28 (82) |
| No | 2 (22) | 7 (19) | 11 (31) | 6 (18) | |
| | | | | | |
| Occupant age structure | < 5 years | 10 (0.33) | 51 (0.38) | 47 (0.39) | 44 (0.34) |
| | 5-9 years | 1 (0.03) | 16 (0.12) | 4 (0.03) | 9 (0.07) |
| | 10-19 years | 1 (0.03) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 2 (0.02) |
| | 20-39 years | 10 (0.33) | 50 (0.37) | 46 (0.38) | 36 (0.28) |
| | 40-59 years | 7 (0.23) | 18 (0.13) | 20 (0.17) | 35 (0.27) |
| | 60+ years | 1 (0.03) | 1 (0.01) | 3 (0.03) | 4 (0.03) |
| | Mean number of occupants (SD) | 3.44 (0.73) | 3.97 (0.77) | 3.39 (0.77) | 3.67 (0.79) |
| SEIFA Level of socio-economic disadvantage | Least disadvantaged | 5 (56) | 16 (44) | 26 (72) | 25 (69) |
| | 4th | 0 (0) | 4 (11) | 0 (0) | 2 (6) |
| | 3rd | 3 (33) | 11 (31) | 9 (25) | 5 (14) |
| | 2nd | 1 (11) | 3 (8) | 1 (3) | 3 (8) |
| | Most disadvantaged | 0 (0) | 2 (6) | 0 (0) | 1 (3) |
| Residence type | Apartment | 3 (33) | 7 (19) | 12 (33) | 12 (33) |
| | Semi, terrace, townhouse, villa | 3 (33) | 13 (36) | 7 (19) | 10 (28) |
| Stand-alone home | 3 (33) | 16 (44) | 17 (47) | 14 (39) |
Characteristics of poisoning incidents
| | | |
| Age | 1 year | 4 (44) |
| | 2 years | 4 (44) |
| | 3 years | 1 (11) |
| Sex | Male | 7 (78) |
| | Female | 2 (22) |
| | | |
| Child was doing something the mother didn’t know the child could do yet | Yes | 4 (44) |
| No | 5 (56) | |
| Child was doing something the mother had previously told the child not to do | Yes | 3 (33) |
| No | 6 (67) | |
| Child was doing something the mother knew the child could do, but had never seen the child try to do before | Yes | 2 (22) |
| No | 7 (78) | |
| | | |
| | | |
| Adult was in same room as child when the poisoning event occurred* | Yes | 1 (11) |
| No | 8 (89) | |
| | | |
| Type of substance accessed | Medicinal | 4 (44) |
| | Non-medicinal | 5 (56) |
| Type of packaging | Bottle with child-resistant cap | 4 (44) |
| | Blister pack | 1 (11) |
| | Other type of packaging | 4 (56) |
| Substance used in last 24 hours | Yes | 3 (33) |
| | No | 5 (56) |
| | Not applicable | 1 (11) |
| Substance accessed in location that was <1.4 m from ground* | Yes | 8 (89) |
| No | 1 (11) | |
| Substance was in its usual place of storage when accessed | Yes | 2 (22) |
| No | 7 (77) | |
| Mother felt that the usual place of storage for the substance accessed was inaccessible to child | Yes | 5 (56) |
| No | 4 (44) | |
| | | |
| Caregiver called for advice prior to presenting to hospital | Yes, PIC | 6 (67) |
| Yes, other | 2 (22) | |
| No | 1 (11) | |
| Child had symptoms associated with poisoning | Yes | 3 (33) |
| No | 6 (67) | |
| Patient disposition | Treated in ED and discharged | 6 (67) |
| Admitted for treatment as inpatient in ED | 3 (33) |
Note: * Abstracted from mothers’ description of the poisoning events.
Summary of univariate model results by domain
| | | | | | |
| DDST Fine motor skills exceed expected level of development | Yes | 6 (67) | 29 (81) | ||
| No | 3 (33) | 7 (19) | |||
| DDST Gross motor skills exceed expected level of development | Yes | 4 (44) | |||
| No | 5 (56) | ||||
| DDST Language skills exceed expected level of development | Yes | 6 (67) | |||
| No | 3 (33) | ||||
| Level of compliance* | Defensive responding | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 4 (11) | |
| | Overt resistance | 2 (22) | 2 (6) | 4 (11) | |
| | Passive noncompliance | 3 (33) | 11 (31) | 9 (25) | |
| | Situational compliance | 4 (44) | 14 (39) | 13 (36) | |
| | Committed compliance | 0 (0) | 9 (25) | 6 (17) | |
| SDQ Number of hours in child care outside home | | 10.0 (0.0 - 28.0) | 14.0 (0.0 - 30.0) | 16.5 (0.0 - 46.0) | |
| | | | | | |
| GHQ Somatic symptoms (subscale A) | | 1.0 (0.0 - 4.0) | 1.0 (0.0 - 6.0) | ||
| GHQ Anxiety (subscore B) | | 1.0 (0.0 - 6.0) | 0.0 (0.0 - 7.0) | 0.0 (0.0 - 7.0) | |
| GHQ Total score | | 2.0 (0.0 - 13.0) | 1.0 (0.0 - 17.0) | 3.0 (0.0 - 21.0) | |
| GHQ Psychiatric caseness (total score >5 indicating mental health issues) | Yes | 4 (44) | 13 (36) | ||
| | No | 5 (56) | 23 (64) | ||
| PSI Parental distress | | 22.0 (12.0 - 29.0) | |||
| PSI Parent–child dysfunctional interaction | | 13.0 (12.0 - 20.0) | 14.0 (12.0 - 42.0) | ||
| PSI Difficult child | | 20.0 (12.0 - 35.0) | 22.0 (13.0 - 52.0) | 21.5 (13.0 - 54.0) | |
| PSI Total score | | 58.0 (37.0 - 78.0) | |||
| PSAPQ Supervision during risk taking | | 4.0 (2.5 - 4.5) | 4.0 (1.7 - 5.0) | 4.0 (1.0 - 5.0) | |
| | | | | | |
| SDQ Number of children in household | | 1.0 (1.0 - 3.0) | 1.0 (1.0 - 3.0) | 2.0 (1.0 - 3.0) | |
| SDQ Percent accessible of all medicinal substance storage locations in bathroom | | 0.0 (0.0 - 100.0) | 0.0 (0.0 - 100.0) | 0.0 (0.0 - 100.0) | |
| SDQ Percent accessible of all medicinal substance storage locations in kitchen | | 0.0 (0.0 - 50.0) | 0.0 (0.0 - 100.0) | 0.0 (0.0 - 100.0) | |
| SDQ Percent accessible of all household substance storage locations in other rooms (eat-in area, dining room, lounge room, family room) | | 0.0 (0.0 - 100.0) | 0.0 (0.0 - 0.0) | ||
| SDQ Temporary storage: “When a medicinal substance is intentionally stored in a temporary location, how often is the substance left out after it is no longer needed?” ** | None of the time | 4 (80) | 15 (63) | 14 (59) | |
| | Some of the time | 1 (20) | 7 (29) | 8 (33) | |
| | Most times | 0 (0) | 2 (8) | 2 (8) | |
| SDQ Temporary storage: “When a household substance is intentionally stored in a temporary location, how often is the substance left out after it is no longer needed?” ** | None of the time | 3 (75) | 6 (55) | ||
| | Some of the time | 1 (25) | 4 (36) | ||
| | Most times | 0 (0) | 1 (9) | ||
| | | | | ||
| Maternal positive control during puzzle task | | 4.0 (3.0 - 5.0) | |||
| Maternal positive affect during puzzle task | | 1.5 (1.0 - 5.0) | 1.0 (1.0 - 5.0) | ||
| Maternal positive affect during free play task | | 2.0 (1.0 - 5.0) | |||
| Child responsiveness during puzzle task | | 6.0 (3.5 - 7.0) | 7.0 (1.0 - 7.0) | 7.0 (2.0 - 7.0) | |
| Child responsiveness during free play task | | 6.5 (3.0 - 7.0) | 7.0 (2.0 - 7.0) | ||
| Child independence during free play task | | 6.0 (3.0 - 6.0) | 6.0 (1.5 - 7.0) | ||
| Dyadic cooperation during free play task | 6.0 (2.0 - 7.0) | 6.8 (1.5 - 7.0) | 7.0 (1.0 - 7.0) |
Notes:
Values in bold indicate a likelihood ratio chi-square p-value of <0.20.
* The categories for this variable were aggregated into a binomial compliance measure for the univariate logistic regression. Children who exhibited ‘situational’ or ‘committed compliance’ to their mother’s clean-up request were considered compliant (Compliance= ‘Yes’). Children who exhibited ‘passive noncompliance’, ‘overt resistance’ or ‘defensive responding’ were considered noncompliant (Compliance = ‘No’).
** The responses for this variable were aggregated into a binomial temporary storage measure for the univariate logistic regression. The following responses were recoded to a ‘Yes’ response in the new binomial variable: ‘Some of the time’ or ‘Most times’. A ‘None of the time’ response was recoded to a ‘No’.
Figure 2Risk factors for unintentional poisoning in final models.