Twenty-Year Trends in Fatal Injuries to Very Young Children: The Persistence of Racial Disparities

Author:

Pressley Joyce C.1234,Barlow Barbara2345,Kendig Tiffany2,Paneth-Pollak Rachel24

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Health Policy and Management

2. Epidemiology

3. Injury Free Coalition for Kids, Mailman School of Public Health

4. Columbia University Center for the Health of Urban Minorities, Columbia University, New York, New York

5. Department of Surgery, Columbia University at Harlem Hospital, New York, New York

Abstract

OBJECTIVE. Mortality trends across modifiable injury mechanisms may reflect how well effective injury prevention efforts are penetrating high-risk populations. This study examined all-cause, unintentional, and intentional injury–related mortality in children who were aged 0 to 4 years for evidence of and to quantify racial disparities by injury mechanism. METHODS. Injury analyses used national vital statistics data from January 1, 1981, to December 31, 2003, that were available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Rate calculations and χ2 test for trends (Mantel extension) used data that were collapsed into 3-year intervals to produce cell sizes with stable estimates. Percentage change for mortality rate ratios used the earliest (1981–1983) and the latest (2001–2003) study period for black, American Indian/Alaskan Native, and Asian/Pacific Islander children, with white children as the comparison group. RESULTS. All-cause injury rates declined during the study period, but current mortality ratios for all-cause injury remained higher in black and American Indian/Alaskan Native children and lower in Asian/Pacific Islander children compared with white children. Trend analyses within racial groups demonstrate significant improvements in all groups for unintentional but not intentional injury. Black and American Indian/Alaskan Native children had higher injury risk as a result of residential fire, suffocation, poisoning, falls, motor vehicle traffic, and firearms. Disparities narrowed for residential fire, pedestrian, and poisoning and widened for motor vehicle occupant, unspecified motor vehicle, and suffocation for black and American Indian/Alaskan Native children. CONCLUSIONS. These findings identify injury areas in which disparities narrowed, improvement occurred with maintenance or widening of disparities, and little or no progress was evident. This study further suggests specific mechanisms whereby new strategies and approaches to address areas that are recalcitrant to improvement in absolute rates and/or narrowing of disparities are needed and where increased dissemination of proven efficacious injury prevention efforts to high-risk populations are indicated.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference46 articles.

1. Institute of Medicine, Bonnie RJ, Fulco CE, Liverman CT, eds. Reducing the Burden of Injury: Advancing Prevention and Treatment. Washington, DC: National Academy Press; 1999:85–86

2. US Preventive Services Task Force. Guide to Clinical Preventive Services, Report of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. 2nd ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 1996

3. Davidson LL, Durkin MS, Kuhn L, O'Connor P, Barlow B, Heagarty MC. The impact of the Safe Kids/Healthy Neighborhoods Injury Prevention Program in Harlem, 1988 through 1991. Am J Public Health. 1994;84:580–586

4. Daniels F, Moore W, Conti C, et al. The role of the African American physician in reducing traffic-related injury and death among African Americans: consensus report of the National Medical Association. J Natl Med Assoc. 2002;94:108–118

5. Quayle KS, Wick NA, Gnauck KA, Schootman M, Jaffe DM. Description of Missouri children who suffer from burn injuries. Inj Prev. 2000;6:255–258

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