Journal article
129 Urban environments and child and adolescent injury deaths in Latin American Cities
Injury prevention, v 28(Suppl 2), pp A19-A19
20 Nov 2022
Abstract
BackgroundUrban environment impacts on child injury deaths are not well understood in low and middle-income cities.MethodsVital registration ICD-10 codes identified 179,432 child injury deaths (2010–2016) in 366 Latin American cities of ≥100,000 population (SALURBAL https://drexel.edu/lac/salurbal/overview/). City-level exposures included population (e.g., population density), landscape (e.g., isolation), street design (e.g., intersection density), and social environment (e.g., education, utility connections). Associations were estimated in multilevel negative binomial models (robust variance, population offset) by age-sex groups (<1, 1–4, 5–9, 10–14, 15–19 years) and injury type (transport, non-transport unintentional, suicide, homicide) comparing high to low standardized exposure values.ResultsThe most frequent child injury deaths were firearm homicides (N=63,296); by age: unintentional suffocation (<1 years), drowning (1–4 years), transport (5–9 years, 10–14 years), and firearm homicide (15–19 years). Child injury death rate types were 5% lower in cities with higher proportion of household water/sewage connections, 10% lower in cities with higher intersection density. Rates were higher in cities with higher isolated urban development. Transport deaths were 15% lower in cities with higher population density, homicide rates were 16% lower in cities with more greenspace, non-transport unintentional death rates were 3% higher in cities with bodies of water, and suicides were 31% lower in cities with higher female secondary education completion.ConclusionCities with more sustainable development and favorable socioeconomic characteristics may create safer environments for urban children.Learning Outcomes1) City-level urban environment characteristics are important determinants of children’s injury death risk; 2) Sustainable city policies can help prevent child injury deaths.
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Details
- Title
- 129 Urban environments and child and adolescent injury deaths in Latin American Cities
- Creators
- Alex Quistberg - Drexel UniversityAna Ortigoza - Drexel UniversityMarcio Alazraqui - Universidad de LANUS, Lanus, ArgentinaPhilipp Hessel - Universidad de los Andes, Bogota, ColombiaFrancisco Diez-Canseco - Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, PeruAmelia Augusta de Lima Friche - Universidade Federal de Minas GeraisAriela Braverman Bronstein - Drexel University, Philadelphia, United StatesDesiree Vidaña Perez - Instituto Nacional de Salud Publica, Mexico City, MexicoWaleska Texeira Caiaffa - Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, BrazilJ Jaime Miranda - Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru
- Publication Details
- Injury prevention, v 28(Suppl 2), pp A19-A19
- Publisher
- BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Urban Health Collaborative
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:000898210800058
- Other Identifier
- 991019305917004721
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- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- International collaboration
- Web of Science research areas
- Public, Environmental & Occupational Health