在土著居民比例高的地区,加拿大成年人因意外伤害住院的情况。

Philippe Finès, Évelyne Bougie, Lisa N. Oliver, D. Kohen
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引用次数: 19

摘要

伤害是导致死亡和发病的主要原因。虽然在国家行政数据库中通常无法获得个人土著身份标识符,但本研究在土著身份居民比例较高的地区按原因调查了意外伤害住院情况。方法根据2004/2005-2009/2010年出院摘要数据库的数据,计算老年人标准化住院率(ASHRs)和比率。结果跌倒是最常见的伤害原因。就男女而言,高比例的第一民族认同地区的ashr最高;在20-29岁的男性中,高百分比的msamims身份地区的总体ASHR最高,而高百分比的因纽特身份地区的男性ASHR在所有年龄组中最低。一些原因,如跌倒,表现出较高的ASHR,但比率与所有原因的总和相似;其他原因,如在第一民族身份占很大比例的地区,男性的火器伤害,其ASHR相对较低,但比率较高。土著居民比例高的地区居民受伤住院的ASHR高于土著居民比例低的地区居民。结论高原住民认同区居民也生活在社会经济条件较差的地区,地区间比率差异的原因有待进一步调查。
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Hospitalizations for unintentional injuries among Canadian adults in areas with a high percentage of Aboriginal-identity residents.
INTRODUCTION Injuries are a leading cause of death and morbidity. While individual Aboriginal identifiers are not routinely available on national administrative databases, this study examines unintentional injury hospitalization, by cause, in areas with a high percentage of Aboriginal-identity residents. METHODS Age-standardized hospitalization rates (ASHRs) and rate ratios were calculated based on 2004/2005-2009/2010 data from the Discharge Abstract Database. RESULTS Falls were the most frequent cause of injury. For both sexes, ASHRs were highest in high-percentage First Nations-identity areas; high-percentage Métis-identity areas presented the highest overall ASHR among men aged 20-29 years, and high-percentage Inuit-identity areas presented the lowest ASHRs among men of all age groups. Some causes, such as falls, presented a high ASHR but a rate ratio similar to that for all causes combined; other causes, such as firearm injuries among men in high-percentage First Nations-identity areas, presented a relatively low ASHR but a high rate ratio. Residents of high-percentage Aboriginal-identity areas have a higher ASHR for hospitalization for injuries than residents of low-percentage Aboriginal-identity areas. CONCLUSION Residents of high-percentage Aboriginal-identity areas also live in areas of lower socio-economic conditions, suggesting that the causes for rate differences among areas require further investigation.
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Chronic Diseases and Injuries in Canada
Chronic Diseases and Injuries in Canada PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
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