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Journal Article

Citation

Turris SA, Jones T, Lund A. Prehosp. Disaster Med. 2018; 33(5): 553-557.

Affiliation

Department of Emergency Medicine,University of British Columbia,Vancouver,British Columbia,Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/S1049023X18000833

PMID

30277196

Abstract

In 2016, the authors published a paper on music festival fatalities between the years 1999 and 2014 (n=722). In this Special Report, they provide an update on fatalities reported at music festivals globally for the period 2016-2017 (n=201). Using a search strategy designed to capture grey literature and media reports of music festival fatalities, reports of the overall frequency and cause-of-death breakdown for publicly reported, festival-related deaths are recorded. This update shows an increase in the frequency of festival-related fatality reports during the new period, together with an increase in the number of deaths attributable to terror (n=60) and overdose/poisoning (n=41). Drawing conclusions about the cause of this increase is challenging given the growth in Internet use, online media reports, and number of music festivals occurring annually when compared with the previous reporting period. The authors re-emphasize the need for a uniform reporting standard and reliable epidemiological data for fatalities related to music festivals, mass gatherings, and special events.Turris SA, Jones T, Lund A. Mortality at music festivals: an update for 2016-2017 - academic and grey literature for case finding.


Language: en

Keywords

fatalities; hazard; mass gathering; music festivals; risk

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