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Journal Article

Citation

Chen AJ, Chan JJ, Linakis JG, Mello MJ, Greenberg PB. R. I .Med. J. (1976) 2014; 97(1): 44-48.

Affiliation

Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery (Ophthalmology) at the Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Chief of Ophthalmology at the Providence Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Associate Director of the Brown/Rhode Island Hospital Ophthalmology Residency Program.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Rhode Island Medical Society)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

24400313

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to describe the epidemiology of consumer product (CP) related eye injuries presenting to US emergency departments (EDs) stratified by age.

METHODS: The Consumer Product Safety Commission's National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (CPSC-NEISS) database was used to derive national, weighted estimates of nonfatal Emergency Department visits for eye injuries by patients' age, gender, diagnosis, injured body part, locale of incidence, and related CP.

RESULTS: The CPs causing the highest proportion of injury visits varied among the different age groups: chemicals in the very young (0-4 yr), household items in 5-9 year olds, sports products in 10-24 year olds, cutting and construction tools in 25-64 year olds, and chemicals in the elderly (65+). Patients aged 0-4 also represented the age interval with the highest rate of injury visits (92 visits per 10,000).

CONCLUSION: This study identified the CPs responsible for the most eye injury visits by age groups. Further research is needed on how to effectively change the behavior of individuals and their environment so that we can minimize preventable eye injuries from consumer products. [Full text available at http://rimed.org/rimedicaljournal-2014-01.asp, free with no login].


Language: en

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