溺水:全球负担、风险因素和预防策略

Aminur Rahman, A. Peden, Lamisa Ashraf, Dan Ryan, A. Bhuiyan, S. Beerman
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引用次数: 4

摘要

溺水已被描述为一个重大的全球公共卫生问题,最近《联合国全球预防溺水宣言》也承认了这一点。虽然溺水影响所有收入水平的国家,但负担主要由低收入和中等收入国家承担,它们占全球死亡人数的90%。此外,关于中低收入国家溺水的数据收集很少,因此溺水的严重程度可能远远大于所代表的。一系列因素,包括性别、年龄、教育、收入、获得水的途径、缺乏游泳技能、商业捕鱼等某些职业、地理上孤立和洪水易发的地区、先前存在的医疗状况以及不安全的水上运输系统,都会影响溺水的风险。一些行为因素,如饮酒或吸毒,不穿救生衣,从事危险行为,如独自游泳或划船,会增加溺水的风险。移民和武装冲突等地缘政治因素也会影响溺水风险。关于预防溺水策略的证据越来越多。这些措施包括泳池围栏等事前干预措施、加强社区教育和意识、提供游泳课程、使用救生衣、成人对儿童的密切监督以及划船规定。减少溺水危害的干预措施包括对溺水事件的识别、救援和复苏进行适当的培训。需要建立一个主动和/或被动的溺水监测系统,以个人环境为重点,并以处于危险中的人群为目标。溺水需要采取协调的多部门行动,提供有效的预防、救援和治疗。因此,所有国家都应按照世卫组织《全球溺水报告》的建议,制定国家水上安全计划。需要进一步研究中低收入国家溺水的流行病学和治疗,以及高收入国家和中低收入国家的非致命性和故意溺水。有效和根据具体情况实施预防溺水战略,包括试点测试、推广和评估,可能有助于减轻所有国家致命和非致命溺水的负担。
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Drowning: Global Burden, Risk Factors, and Prevention Strategies
Drowning has been described as a major global public health problem and has recently been acknowledged by a United Nations Declaration on Global Drowning Prevention. While drowning impacts countries of all income levels, the burden is overwhelmingly borne by low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) who account for 90% of the global death toll. In addition, there is scarce data collection on drowning in LMICs, so the magnitude of drowning may be far greater than is represented. A range of factors including sex, age, education, income, access to water, a lack of swimming skills, certain occupations like commercial fishing, geographically isolated and flood-prone locations, preexisting medical conditions, and unsafe water transport systems, influence the risk of drowning. Some behavioral factors, such as alcohol or drug consumption, not wearing life jackets, and engaging in risky behaviors such as swimming or boating alone, increase drowning risk. Geopolitical factors such as migration and armed conflict can also impact drowning risk. There is a growing body of evidence on drowning prevention strategies. These include pre-event interventions such as pool fencing, enhancing community education and awareness, providing swimming lessons, use of lifejackets, close supervision of children by adults, and boating regulations. Interventions to reduce harm from drowning include appropriate training for recognition of a drowning event, rescue, and resuscitation. An active and/or passive surveillance system for drowning, focusing on individual settings and targeting populations at risk, is required. Drowning requires coordinated multisectoral action to provide effective prevention, rescue, and treatment. Therefore, all countries should aim to develop a national water safety plan, as recommended in the WHO Global Report on Drowning. Further research is required on the epidemiology and treatment of drowning in LMICs as well as non-fatal and intentional drowning in both high-income countries (HICs) and LMICs. Effective and context-specific implementation of drowning prevention strategies, including pilot testing, scale up and evaluation, are likely to help reduce the burden of both fatal and non-fatal drowning in all countries.
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