| Literature DB >> 29420463 |
Corinne F David-Ferdon, Tadesse Haileyesus, Yang Liu, Thomas R Simon, Marcie-Jo Kresnow.
Abstract
In 2015, persons aged 10-24 years who were treated for nonfatal assault injuries in emergency departments (EDs) in the United States accounted for 32% of the approximately 1.5 million patients of all ages that EDs treated for nonfatal assault injuries (1). CDC analyzed data from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System-All Injury Program (NEISS-AIP) to examine 2001-2015 trends in nonfatal assault injuries among youths treated in EDs, by sex and age group, and to assess current rates by sex, age group, mechanism of injury, and disposition (1). Rates for 2001-2015 were significantly higher among males than among females and among young adults aged 20-24 years than among youths aged 10-14 and 15-19 years. During 2011-2015, rates declined for all groups. The 2015 rate among persons aged 10-24 years was 753.2 per 100,000 population, the lowest in the 15-year study period. Despite encouraging trends, the assault rate among young persons remains high. Rates in 2015 were higher among males, persons aged 20-24 years, and those who incurred intentional strike or hit injuries. Nearly one in 10 patients were admitted to the hospital, transferred to another hospital, or held for observation. Youth violence prevention strategies, including primary prevention approaches that build individual skills, strengthen family relationships, or connect young persons treated in EDs to immediate and ongoing support, can be implemented to decrease injuries and fatalities (2).Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29420463 PMCID: PMC5812473 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6705a1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Average annual rate of nonfatal assault injuries per 100,000 population among persons aged 10–24 years treated in hospital emergency departments, by sex and age group — United States, 2001–2015
| Characteristic | No. of sample cases | National estimate* (%) | Average annual rate† (95% CI) | No. of joinpoints | Joinpoint year range | APC | Rate† range during joinpoint year | % reduction in rate during joinpoint year range |
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| Male | 120,930 | 6,200,495 (64.6) | 1,265.3 (1,003.6–1,527.1) | 1 | 2001–2011 | −1.2§ | (1,476.8–1309.5) | 11.3 |
| 2011–2015 | −8.5§ | (1,309.5–914.9) | 30.1 | |||||
| Female | 64,687 | 3,401,887 (35.4) | 729.0 (589.9–868.1) | 2 | 2001–2008 | −3.4§ | (866.6–676.4) | 21.9 |
| 2008–2011 | 4.5 | — | — | |||||
| 2011–2015 | −7.4§ | (755.7–583.9) | 22.7 | |||||
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| 10–14 | 34,132 | 1,447,593 (15.1) | 461.7 (321.2–602.2) | 2 | 2001–2008 | −8.7§ | (683.2–385.7) | 43.5 |
| 2008–2011 | 2.1 | — | — | |||||
| 2011–2015 | −11.5§ | (413.7–267.0) | 35.5 | |||||
| 15–19 | 74,267 | 3,724,730 (38.8) | 1,159.7 (930.2–1,389.1) | 1 | 2001–2011 | −1.7§ | (1,362.0–1,170.8) | 14.0 |
| 2011–2015 | −9.2§ | (1,170.8–813.1) | 30.6 | |||||
| 20–24 | 77,246 | 4,431,610 (46.1) | 1,376.5 (1,132.3–1,620.7) | 1 | 2001–2011 | 0.1 | — | — |
| 2011–2015 | −5.6§ | (1,494.5–1,138.6) | 23.8 | |||||
Abbreviations: APC = annual percentage change; CI = confidence interval.
* Excludes sexual assault cases; includes assault cases with unknown sex. Estimates might not sum to total because of rounding.
† Crude rate per 100,000 population.
§ Statistical significance of regression results (p<0.05).
FIGURE 1Nonfatal assault* injury rate among persons aged 10–24 years treated in hospital emergency departments, by sex — United States, 2001–2015†
* Excluding sexual assault.
†Joinpoint regression analysis was used to determine annual percentage change with statistically significant trend and significant joinpoints indicated (p<0.05).
FIGURE 2Nonfatal assault* injury rate among persons aged 10–24 years treated in hospital emergency departments, by age group — United States, 2001–2015†
* Excluding sexual assault.
†Joinpoint regression analysis was used to determine annual percentage change with statistically significant trend and significant joinpoints indicated (p<0.05).