School-based injury outcomes in children from a low-income setting: Results from the pilot injury surveillance in Rawalpindi city, Pakistan

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Abstract

Background: School-based injuries account for one in five unintentional childhood injuries. Little is known about the epidemiology of school-based injuries in low-income settings. The objective of our study was to compare emergency department (ED) outcomes of the school-based injuries with respect to age, sex, and injury mechanisms in a Pakistani urban setting. Findings. A pilot injury surveillance study was conducted at the EDs of three major tertiary-care hospitals of Rawalpindi city from July 2007 to June 2008 and included children of less than 15years injured at school. The World Health Organizations questionnaire for injury surveillance was used. There were 923 school injury cases. Mean age of children involved was 8.3years (SD±3.3) with male female ratio 2.9:1. Most injuries occurred while playing 85.6% (n=789); of which the most common mechanism was falls (n=797, 86.4%). Nineteen of twenty cases were directly discharged home from the ED (N=861). Compared to ED discharged cases, injury characteristics overrepresented in hospital admitted cases (n=46) were age 10-14years (65.2% vs. 40.9%, p=0.005), male (88.6% vs. 25.9%), involved in educational activities (39.1% vs. 5.3%), injured from fire/heat (37.8% vs. 0.6%), had burns (39.5% vs. 0.9%) and head injuries (27.9% vs. 6.4%). Conclusion: Falls while playing are the commonest injury mechanism in school-based injuries reported in our ED sample. School officials need to prevent these injuries. Studying injury hazards present in school environment in Pakistan might facilitate developing specific prevention strategies. © 2013 Khan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Khan, U. R., Bhatti, J. A., Zia, N., & Farooq, U. (2013). School-based injury outcomes in children from a low-income setting: Results from the pilot injury surveillance in Rawalpindi city, Pakistan. BMC Research Notes, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-6-86

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