| Literature DB >> 29192337 |
Katherine Wheeler-Martin1, Stephen J Mooney2, David C Lee3,4, Andrew Rundle4, Charles DiMaggio5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite reductions in youth pedestrian and bicyclist deaths over the past two decades, these injuries remain a substantial cause of morbidity and mortality for children and adolescents. There is a need for additional information on non-fatal pediatric pedestrian injuries and the role of traumatic brain injury (TBI), a leading cause of acquired disability.Entities:
Keywords: Bicycle; Emergency department; Pedestrian; Pediatric; Traumatic brain injury; Youth
Year: 2017 PMID: 29192337 PMCID: PMC5709254 DOI: 10.1186/s40621-017-0128-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inj Epidemiol ISSN: 2197-1714
Survey-weighted counts and standard errors (SE), US emergency department discharges for pediatric pedestrian and bicyclist injuries and deaths, ages 0–19 years, with annual national estimates of youth population and total vehicle miles traveled on US highways, 2006–2012. Discrepancies in totals (pedestrian plus bicycle) due to sampling variation and rounding
| Injuries | Deaths | US population estimate, | US highway vehicle miles traveled, millions | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Pedestrians (SE) | Bicyclists (SE) | Both (SE) | Pedestrians (SE) | Bicyclists (SE) | Both (SE) | ||
| 2006 | 52,961 (523) | 18,547 (306) | 71,501 (606) | 515 (52) | 85 (21) | 600 (56) | 82,482,488 | 3,012,888 |
| 2007 | 53,577 (516) | 19,093 (306) | 72,661 (600) | 463 (53) | 72 (18) | 536 (56) | 82,814,893 | 3,049,027 |
| 2008 | 52,417 (503) | 19,326 (306) | 71,729 (589) | 511 (51) | 92 (21) | 603 (55) | 83,236,036 | 2,992,705 |
| 2009 | 47,074 (487) | 17,654 (301) | 64,714 (572) | 426 (45) | 70 (20) | 496 (50) | 83,280,391 | 2,975,804 |
| 2010 | 46,268 (485) | 18,055 (304) | 64,307 (572) | 410 (44) | 58 (20) | 468 (48) | 83,118,264 | 2,985,854 |
| 2011 | 44,647 (465) | 16,724 (283) | 61,371 (544) | 332 (41) | 48 (15) | 380 (44) | 82,749,431 | 2,968,990 |
| 2012 | 42,839 (452) | 17,982 (299) | 60,811 (542) | 386 (44) | 63 (19) | 449 (48) | 82,324,415 | 2,988,021 |
| Total | 339,783 (1298) | 127,379 (796) | 467,093 (1522) | 3042 (125) | 488 (51) | 3531 (135) | NA | NA |
Fig. 1Pediatric pedestrian and bicyclist injury discharge rates per 10,000 population 0–19 year-olds, US EDs, 2006–2012
Fig. 2Pediatric pedestrian and bicyclist injury discharge rates per 100,000,000 highway vehicle miles, US EDs, 2006–2012
Fig. 3Age-group specific pediatric pedestrian and bicyclist injury discharge rates per 10,000 population, US EDs, 2006–2012
Fig. 4Region specific pediatric pedestrian and bicyclist injury discharge rates per 10,000 population, US EDs, 2006–2010
Total pedestrian and bicyclist injuries, deaths, and case fatality rate with a primary diagnosis of traumatic brain injury (TBI), by grade (mild, moderate, or severe)
| TBI Grade | Injuries (95% CI) | Deaths (95% CI) | Case Fatality Rate (%), (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type I (Severe) | 6690 (6205–7175) | 885 (553–1217) | 13.2 (8.1–18.3) |
| Type II (Moderate) | 17,290 (16037–18,543) | 60 (38–83) | 0.3 (0.0–2.1) |
| Type III (Mild) | 1670 (1549–1800) | (NA) | (NA) |
Logistic regression model for pedestrian vs. bicyclist injury on the risk of fatality controlling for age, gender, injury severity, TBI, TBI*pedestrian status, and level 1 or 2 trauma center status; US emergency department discharges, 2006–2012
| Variable | Adjusted Odds Ratio (95% CI) |
|---|---|
| Pedestrian | 2.4 (2.3, 2.6) |
| Age | 0.7 (0.7, 0.7) |
| Female | 0.9 (0.9, 1.0) |
| Severe injury (ICISS < 0.94) | 16.9 (15.9, 17.9) |
| TBI | 6.3 (6.0, 6.6) |
| Trauma center | 0.9 (0.9, 1.0) |