Psychosocial factors associated with physical injury among adults in Eswatini

IF 0.8 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Journal of Psychology in Africa Pub Date : 2023-01-02 DOI:10.1080/14330237.2023.2175982
K. Peltzer
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Abstract

This study aimed to examine the psychosocial factors associated with physical injury among adults in Eswatini. The investigation included 3 281 individuals (15 to 69 years) from the 2014 Eswatini cross-sectional STEPwise approach to non-communicable disease risk factor surveillance (STEPS) survey. Results indicated that 8.5% of participants had physical injury in the past 12 months, 1.2% had a road traffic injury, 6.3% had other injury, and 2.4% had violence incidents in the past 12 months. In adjusted logistic regression analysis, younger age (15 to 24 years, and 25 to 34 years), exposure to childhood physical abuse, threats, family member attempted suicide, and past and current tobacco use were significantly and positively associated with injury. Furthermore, in separate multivariable models, binge drinking was significantly and positively associated with road traffic injury, and violent injury. Almost one in ten participants (8.5%) had any injury in the past 12 months. The results suggest that psychosocial antecedents should be integrated into injury prevention in this low-resourced country.
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与斯威士兰成年人身体伤害相关的社会心理因素
本研究旨在探讨与斯威士兰成年人身体伤害相关的社会心理因素。该调查包括来自2014年Eswatini非传染性疾病风险因素监测(STEPS)横断面逐步方法调查的3 281名个体(15至69岁)。结果显示,在过去12个月内,8.5%的参与者有过身体伤害,1.2%有过道路交通伤害,6.3%有过其他伤害,2.4%有过暴力事件。在调整后的logistic回归分析中,年龄较小(15至24岁和25至34岁)、童年时期遭受身体虐待、威胁、家庭成员自杀未遂以及过去和现在的烟草使用与伤害显著正相关。此外,在独立的多变量模型中,酗酒与道路交通伤害和暴力伤害显著正相关。近十分之一的参与者(8.5%)在过去12个月内受过任何伤害。结果表明,在这个资源匮乏的国家,心理社会因素应纳入伤害预防。
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来源期刊
Journal of Psychology in Africa
Journal of Psychology in Africa PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
16.70%
发文量
62
期刊介绍: Findings from psychological research in Africa and related regions needs a forum for better dissemination and utilisation in the context of development. Special emphasis is placed on the consideration of African, African-American, Asian, Caribbean, and Hispanic-Latino realities and problems. Contributions should attempt a synthesis of emic and etic methodologies and applications. The Journal of Psychology in Africa includes original articles, review articles, book reviews, commentaries, special issues, case analyses, reports and announcements.
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