CONTEXT
Afghanistan is one of the countries most affected by injuries due to landmines and unexploded ordnance.
OBJECTIVE
To understand the epidemiological patterns and risk factors for injury due to landmines and unexploded ordnance.
DESIGN AND SETTING
Analysis of surveillance data on landmine and unexploded ordnance injuries in Afghanistan collected by the International Committee of the Red Cross in 390 health facilities in Afghanistan. Surveillance data were used to describe injury trends, injury types, demographics, and risk behaviors of those injured and explosive types related to landmine and unexploded ordnance incidents.
PARTICIPANTS
A total of 1636 individuals injured by landmines and unexploded ordnance, March 2001 through June 2002.
RESULTS
Eighty-one percent of those injured were civilians, 91.6% were men and boys, and 45.9% were younger than 16 years. Children were more likely to be injured by unexploded ordnance (which includes grenades, bombs, mortar shells, and cluster munitions), whereas adults were injured mostly by landmines. The most common risk behaviors for children were playing and tending animals; for adults, these risk behaviors were military activity and activities of economic necessity (eg, farming, traveling). The case-fatality rate of 9.4% is probably underestimated because surveillance predominantly detects those who survive long enough to receive medical care.
CONCLUSIONS
Landmine risk education should focus on hazards due to unexploded ordnance for children and on landmine hazards for adults and should address age-specific risk behaviors. Expanding community-based and clinic-based reporting will improve the sensitivity and representativeness of surveillance.
[1]
A. Ascherio,et al.
Deaths and injuries caused by land mines in Mozambique
,
1995,
The Lancet.
[2]
Neil Andersson,et al.
Social cost of land mines in four countries: Afghanistan, Bosnia, Cambodia, and Mozambique
,
1995,
BMJ.
[3]
S J Jeffrey,et al.
Antipersonnel mines: who are the victims?
,
1996,
Journal of accident & emergency medicine.
[4]
The consequence of land mines on public health.
,
1996,
Prehospital and disaster medicine.
[5]
C. Giannou.
Antipersonnel landmines: facts, fictions, and priorities.
,
1997,
BMJ.
[6]
Landmine-related injuries, 1993-1996.
,
1997,
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.
[7]
Hans O Samnegaard,et al.
Effect of type and transfer of conventional weapons on civilian injuries: retrospective analysis of prospective data from Red Cross hospitals
,
1999,
BMJ.
[8]
G. Kvåle,et al.
Landmine injuries in Eritrea
,
2000,
BMJ : British Medical Journal.