TY - JOUR
PY - 2021//
TI - Paediatric playground and tree-related injuries: hospital admissions in the Midland region of New Zealand
JO - Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health
A1 - Bentley, Maria
A1 - Amey, Janet
A1 - Smith, Alastair
A1 - Christey, Grant
SP - ePub
EP - ePub
VL - ePub
IS - ePub
N2 - AIM: To examine the incidence and outcomes of paediatric playground and tree-related injuries in the Midland region of New Zealand.
METHODS: A retrospective review of Midland Trauma Registry hospitalisation data between January 2012 and December 2018 was undertaken. Cases included children aged 0-14 years hospitalised for playground and tree-related injuries. Demographic and event information, injury severity and hospital-related outcomes were examined.
RESULTS: Playground and tree-related hospitalisations (n = 1941) occurred with an age-standardised rate of 144.3/100 000 (confidence interval (CI) 127.3-161.3) and increased 1.4% (CI 1.3-4.2%) annually. The highest incidence was observed in 5-9-year olds (248.8/100 000) with 0-4 and 10-14-year olds at 86.0 and 89.2/100 000, respectively. Injuries most commonly occurred at home, school or pre-school (77.1%), 93.7% were due to falls and, the upper extremity was the most frequently injured body region (69.9%), particularly due to forearm (55.6%) and upper arm (34.7%) fractures. Tree-related incidents comprised 11.6% of all injuries and explained 57.1% of injuries classified as major severity. Fifty-eight percent of children were hospitalised for 1 day and 97.0% for less than 5 days. Estimated hospital costs were NZ$1.2 million annually with a median of NZ$3898 per incident. Injuries classified as minor severity accounted for 86.5% of the total estimated cost.
CONCLUSION: Children aged 5-9 years' experience high rates of costly hospitalisation for playground and tree-related injuries. Targeted injury prevention initiatives, particularly in the home and school environments, are imperative to reduce the incidence and burden of playground and tree-related injuries to affected children, their families and hospital resources.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1034-4810 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpc.15609 ID - ref1 ER -