Literature DB >> 23987217

Hospitalizations for unintentional injuries among Canadian adults in areas with a high percentage of Aboriginal-identity residents.

P Finès1, E Bougie, L N Oliver, D E Kohen.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Injuries are a leading cause of death and morbidity. While individual Aboriginal identifiers are not routinely available on national administrative databases, this study examines unintentional injury hospitalization, by cause, in areas with a high percentage of Aboriginal-identity residents.
METHODS: Age-standardized hospitalization rates (ASHRs) and rate ratios were calculated based on 2004/2005-2009/2010 data from the Discharge Abstract Database.
RESULTS: Falls were the most frequent cause of injury. For both sexes, ASHRs were highest in high-percentage First Nations-identity areas; high-percentage Métis-identity areas presented the highest overall ASHR among men aged 20-29 years, and high-percentage Inuit-identity areas presented the lowest ASHRs among men of all age groups. Some causes, such as falls, presented a high ASHR but a rate ratio similar to that for all causes combined; other causes, such as firearm injuries among men in high-percentage First Nations-identity areas, presented a relatively low ASHR but a high rate ratio. Residents of high-percentage Aboriginal-identity areas have a higher ASHR for hospitalization for injuries than residents of low-percentage Aboriginal-identity areas.
CONCLUSION: Residents of high-percentage Aboriginal-identity areas also live in areas of lower socio-economic conditions, suggesting that the causes for rate differences among areas require further investigation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Aboriginal people; Census; First Nations; Inuit; Métis; geographical methods; hospitalization; injuries

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23987217

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chronic Dis Inj Can        ISSN: 1925-6515


  5 in total

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2.  Injuries to Aboriginal populations living on- and off-reserve in metropolitan and non-metropolitan areas in British Columbia, Canada: Incidence and trends, 1986-2010.

Authors:  Mariana Brussoni; M Anne George; Andrew Jin; Christopher E Lalonde; Rod McCormick
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Review 3.  Development and Validation of Indicators for Population Injury Surveillance in Hong Kong: Development and Usability Study.

Authors:  Keith T S Tung; Rosa S Wong; Frederick K Ho; Ko Ling Chan; Wilfred H S Wong; Hugo Leung; Ming Leung; Gilberto K K Leung; Chun Bong Chow; Patrick Ip
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4.  Primary care visits due to injuries among the Aboriginal off-reserve population of British Columbia, Canada, 1991-2010.

Authors:  Andrew Jin; M Anne George; Mariana Brussoni; Christopher E Lalonde; Rod McCormick
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2015-11-19

5.  Investigating environmental determinants of injury and trauma in the Canadian north.

Authors:  Agata Durkalec; Chris Furgal; Mark W Skinner; Tom Sheldon
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2014-01-28       Impact factor: 3.390

  5 in total

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