Objectives: To characterize the burden of unintentional injury mortality among American Indians/Alaska Natives (AI/ANs) in Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin and identify segments of the population that may especially benefit from policy and practice actions to reduce unintentional injury mortality risk factors.
Design: Surveillance of mortality data from CDC WONDER and WISQARS online databases.
Setting: The 3 states in the Indian Health Service (IHS) Bemidji Area: Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.
Participants: AI/ANs and whites who died from unintentional injuries in 2011-2015 in Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.
Main Outcome Measure: Unintentional injury mortality rates and AI/AN versus white unintentional injury mortality disparity ratios.
Results: For all types of unintentional injury mortality, from 2011 to 2015, AI/ANs in the Bemidji Area died at an age-adjusted rate that was 77% higher than that for whites, a statistically significant difference. For AI/ANs in the 3-state area, the top cause of unintentional death was poisoning. The poisoning rate was a statistically significant 2.64 times as high for AI/ANs as that for whites, the highest disparity seen by type. When analyzed by age, gender, and rural/urban residence, unintentional injury mortality rates were almost always higher for AI/ANs. AI/ANs also had a much higher burden of years of potential life lost.
Conclusions: Unintentional injury mortality significantly affects AI/ANs in the 3-state area and to a larger degree than for whites. However, some of the risk factors for unintentional injury are modifiable and, if addressed effectively, can reduce injury deaths. Governments, local leaders, organizations, and individuals can reduce AI/ANs' risk of unintentional injury by providing effective programming; encouraging or modeling behavior change; advocating for, creating, and enforcing laws and policies; and making infrastructure improvements. Increased attention to this topic and equitable efforts to reduce risk factors have great potential to reduce the burden of unintentional injury deaths for AI/ANs and all peoples.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PHH.0000000000001018 | DOI Listing |
J Surg Res
January 2025
Department of Pediatric Surgery, University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston, Galveston, Texas. Electronic address:
Introduction: Hospital-based violence intervention programs primarily target adults, raising questions about the effectiveness in preventing pediatric firearm deaths. We hypothesized that pediatric and adult firearm injury deaths are different enough to require unique intervention strategies.
Methods: Retrospective chart review was conducted of medical examiner and trauma center records of firearm-related deaths in the largest metropolitan county in Texas.
Inj Prev
January 2025
Safety Promotion and Injury Prevention Research Center, Department of Epidemiology, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences School of Public Health and Safety, Tehran, Iran (the Islamic Republic of)
Background: Drowning is a serious and neglected public health threat, and prevention of drowning has a multisectoral nature and requires multidimensional research. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the spatio-temporal variation in fatal unintentional drowning rates among the Iranian population from 2005 to 2022.
Methods: In this repeated cross-sectional study, registry data were extracted from legal medicine organisations during 2005-2022.
Pediatrics
January 2025
Division of Endocrinology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas Southwestern, Dallas, Texas.
Fractures are common injuries in childhood and can be caused by unintentional injury, medical conditions, and child abuse. Although the consequences of failing to diagnose an abusive injury in a child can be grave, the consequences of incorrectly diagnosing child abuse in a child whose fractures have another etiology are also significant. This report aims to review recent advances in the understanding of fracture specificity, fracture mechanisms, and other medical conditions that predispose infants and children to fracture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Gastroenterol Peru
January 2025
Centro de Gastroenterología, Bogotá, Colombia; Gastroenterología y endoscopia digestiva, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia; Gastroenterología, Hospital Universitario Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia.
In this article, we present an exceptionally rare and challenging clinical case. It concerns a 65-year-old woman who, while eating, accidentally ingested a thorn. This foreign body, after being swallowed, migrated from the proximal esophagus, until it penetrated the left internal jugular vein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInj Prev
January 2025
Department of Pediatrics, Children's Mercy Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri, USA.
Objective: Community context influences children's risk for injury. We aimed to measure the explanatory capacity of two ZIP code-level measures-the Child Opportunity Index V.3.
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