Ricardo Pérez-Núñez1, Juan Daniel Vera-López2. 1. Centro de Investigación en Sistemas de Salud, Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública, Cuernavaca, Morelos, México. Electronic address: ricardo.perez@insp.mx. 2. Secretariado Técnico, Consejo Nacional para la Prevención de Accidentes, Secretaría de Salud de México, Ciudad de México, México.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To characterize the epidemiology of unintentional asphyxias in Mexico from 1999 to 2017. METHOD: Secondary analysis of vital registries, three national health surveys and information from the safety inspection program of the Ministry of Health in Mexico were used to characterize fatal and non-fatal drownings (ICD-10: W65-W74) and other asphyxias including suffocation, chocking and strangulation (ICD-10: W75-W84), and to estimate the level of exposure to different risk factors within households and daycares. RESULTS: 100,834 deaths were registered, 44.66% were drowning and 77.17% male. Drownings mainly affect children and adolescents, occur in April, July and August, on Sundays, during the afternoon. Other asphyxias affect children and the elderly more frequently, occur mainly from December to February, on Sundays and from 4 to 6h. According to ENSANut-2012, 53,065 individuals experience a non-fatal asphyxia per year, 26.21% of them with permanent consequences in their health and wellbeing. Important risks of unintentional asphyxias are present in 38% of daycares and 80% of households analyzed. CONCLUSIONS: Unintentional asphyxias are a major public health problem that needs to be urgently attended to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, in particular the 3.2. Evidence presented in this work constitutes an input to inform and orient efforts directed to tackle this problem.
OBJECTIVE: To characterize the epidemiology of unintentional asphyxias in Mexico from 1999 to 2017. METHOD: Secondary analysis of vital registries, three national health surveys and information from the safety inspection program of the Ministry of Health in Mexico were used to characterize fatal and non-fatal drownings (ICD-10: W65-W74) and other asphyxias including suffocation, chocking and strangulation (ICD-10: W75-W84), and to estimate the level of exposure to different risk factors within households and daycares. RESULTS: 100,834 deaths were registered, 44.66% were drowning and 77.17% male. Drownings mainly affect children and adolescents, occur in April, July and August, on Sundays, during the afternoon. Other asphyxias affect children and the elderly more frequently, occur mainly from December to February, on Sundays and from 4 to 6h. According to ENSANut-2012, 53,065 individuals experience a non-fatal asphyxia per year, 26.21% of them with permanent consequences in their health and wellbeing. Important risks of unintentional asphyxias are present in 38% of daycares and 80% of households analyzed. CONCLUSIONS: Unintentional asphyxias are a major public health problem that needs to be urgently attended to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, in particular the 3.2. Evidence presented in this work constitutes an input to inform and orient efforts directed to tackle this problem.
Authors: Martha Híjar; Ricardo Pérez-Núñez; Elisa Hidalgo-Solórzano; Bernardo Hernández Prado; Rosario Valdez-Santiago; Erin B Hamilton; Spencer L James; Gregory J Bertolacci; Matthew Cunningham; Zachary V Dingels; Jack T Fox; Zichen Liu; Nicholas L S Roberts; Dillon O Sylte; Marcela Agudelo-Botero; Guilherme Borges; Lucero Cahuana-Hurtado; Ismael R Campos-Nonato; Rosario Cárdenas; Claudio Alberto Dávila-Cervantes; Edgar Denova-Gutiérrez; Daniel Diaz; Van C Lansingh; Gabriel Martinez; Pablo A Montero-Zamora; Edson Serván-Mori; Rafael Lozano Journal: Inj Prev Date: 2020-04-01 Impact factor: 2.399