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Journal Article

Citation

Sceats J, Gillies J. N. Zeal. Med. J. 1989; 102(875): 467-469.

Affiliation

Waikato Hospital, Hamilton.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1989, New Zealand Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2779899

Abstract

All attendances at Waikato Hospital accident and emergency department since 1980 have been coded and stored in computer files. Fifty thousand children under age 15 years attended A&E between 1980 and 1986. Age-specific attendance rates were determined and major reasons for consultation examined. The attendance rate for illness was very high in infants with levels above 1200/10,000 for every year. This rate declined as children became older. Attendance rates for injury events were highest for infants (1601/10,000), with the 10-14 year olds second (1100/10,000). Age and ethnic group specific rates were determined and show a very high rate of attendance for Maori infants with 60% attending A&E in 1986. Respiratory illnesses form the major reason for consultation for illness, with the highest rate in children under five years. Thirty-two percent in the under one year group and 43% in the 1-4 year group came to A&E with respiratory illnesses. Injury involving falls or hitting an object are the major reasons for consultation in all age groups under 10 years. This involved 41% of all accidents in the under 1 year age group, 46% in 1-4 and 47% in the 5-9 age group. Sporting injuries dominated the 10-14 age group with 28% of all accidents being sports related. Road traffic injuries reflect the mobility of each age group with 7% of accidents in the under 1 group, rising to 14% for all children over 4 years. The implications of these patterns are discussed.


Language: en

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