Australia . pedestrian injuries in Perth , Western A case-control study of childhood

Accepted for publication December 1995 Abstract Study objectives To identify the determinants of childhood pedestrian injuries, taking the child's exposure to the road environment into account. Design This was a case-control study. Setting and participants The study was conducted in Perth, Western Australia between 1991 and 1993. Altogether 100 injured and 400 uninjured child pedestrians aged 1 to 14 years were studied. Aspects of the child's social and physical environments, measures of his or her behaviour, cognitive skills, and "habitual" exposure to the road environment, as well as his or her knowledge of road safety, were recorded. Main results The likelihood of injury increased by 12% with each 10 000 vehicles per day increase in the volume of traffic (odds ratio (OR) 1P12, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1-05, 1.19) on roads most frequently crossed. In addition, the presence of visual obstacles on the verge of the child's street of residence increased the likelihood ofinjury by more than 2*6 times (OR 2-68, 95% CI = 1-42, 5 02). In contrast, the absence of footpaths was associated with a 52% reduction in the likelihood of injury compared with the presence offootpaths on the child's street ofresidence (OR 0-48, 95% CI=0-27, 0.87). Conclusion The amount of exposure to the road environment and the nature of the road environment to which the child pedestrian was exposed partly influenced the likelihood of injury in children from low socioeconomic areas, male children, and children aged 13 to 14 years. Until now, the excess incidence of childhood pedestrian injuries in these subgroups of the population had not been explained because the child's exposure per se had not been examined.

[1]  Personality characteristics of the child accident repeater , 1997 .

[2]  F. Rivara,et al.  Demographic analysis of childhood pedestrian injuries. , 1985, Pediatrics.

[3]  I B Pless,et al.  A case-control study of pedestrian and bicyclist injuries in childhood. , 1989, American journal of public health.

[4]  R. J. Smeed,et al.  SOME ASPECTS OF PEDESTRIAN SAFETY , 1968 .

[5]  A. Osborn,et al.  The Rationale for a Composite Index of Social Class and Its Evaluation , 1979 .

[6]  Barbara Preston,et al.  Statistical analysis of child pedestrian accidents in Manchester and Salford , 1972 .

[7]  S P Baker,et al.  Childhood injury deaths: national analysis and geographic variations. , 1989, American journal of public health.

[8]  W. King,et al.  Racial differences in childhood hospitalized pedestrian injuries. , 1992, Pediatric emergency care.

[9]  I B Pless,et al.  Social class and the occurrence of traffic injuries and deaths in urban children. , 1990, Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique.

[10]  D. Lewall,et al.  THE EPIDEMIOLOGY AND PREVENTION OF TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS INVOLVING CHILD PEDESTRIANS. , 1963, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[11]  F. Rivara,et al.  Child pedestrian injuries in the United States. Current status of the problem, potential interventions, and future research needs. , 1990, American journal of diseases of children.

[12]  C I Howarth,et al.  The exposure of young children to accident risk as pedestrians. , 1996, Ergonomics.

[13]  S. Streat,et al.  Critical injuries in paediatric pedestrians. , 1991, The New Zealand medical journal.

[14]  J. Murphy,et al.  The Recognition of Psychosocial Disorders in Pediatric Office Practice: The Current Status of the Pediatric Symptom Checklist , 1990, Journal of developmental and behavioral pediatrics : JDBP.

[15]  E. Maurice Backett,et al.  Social Patterns of Road Accidents to Children , 1959 .

[16]  Brian A. Jonah,et al.  Measuring the relative risk of pedestrian accidents , 1983 .

[17]  Phil A. Silva,et al.  Psychosocial factors in unintentional childhood injuries: Results from a longitudinal study☆ , 1987 .

[18]  K. Jamrozik,et al.  A case-control study of traffic risk factors and child pedestrian injury. , 1995, International journal of epidemiology.