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Childhood injury in Tower Hamlets: audit of children presenting with injury to an inner city A&E department in London

Childhood injury in Tower Hamlets: audit of children presenting with injury to an inner city A&E department in London
Childhood injury in Tower Hamlets: audit of children presenting with injury to an inner city A&E department in London
Introduction

Childhood injury is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide with the most socio-economically deprived children at greatest risk. Current routine NHS hospital data collection in England is inadequate to inform or evaluate prevention strategies. A pilot study of enhanced data collection was conducted to assess the feasibility of collecting accident and emergency data for national injury surveillance.

Aims

To evaluate the reliability and feasibility of supplementary data collection using a paper-based questionnaire and to assess the potential relationship between income deprivation and incidence of paediatric injury.

Methods

Clinical staff conducted an audit of injuries in all patients under 16 years between June and December 2012 through completion of a questionnaire while taking the medical history. Descriptive statistics were produced for age, sex, time of arrival, activity at time of injury, mechanism and location of injuries. The association between known injury incidence and area level income deprivation (2010 English Index of Multiple Deprivation [IMD] Income Deprivation Domain from home postcode) was assessed using Spearman's rank correlation. Representativeness of the audit was measured using z-test statistics for time of arrival, age, sex and ethnicity.

Results

The paper audit captured 414 (6.5%) of the 6358 under-16 injury-related attendances recorded on the NHS Care Record Service Dataset. Comparison of the audit dataset with NHS records showed that the audit was not representative of the larger dataset except for sex of the patient. There was a positive correlation between injury incidence and income deprivation measured using IMD score where data were available (n = 384, p < 0.001). Nearly half of the attendances were due to falls, slips or trips (49.8%) and more than half were due to either leisure (32.9%) or sport (18.1%) activities.

Conclusion

There is evidence of area level income inequalities in injury incidence among children attending the Royal London Hospital. The audit failed to capture a high proportion of cases, likely due to the paper-based format used. This study highlights the importance of routinely collecting enhanced injury data in computerized hospital admission systems to provide the necessary evidence base for effective injury prevention. The findings have contributed to plans for implementation.
injury surveillance, paediatric injury, income deprivation
0020-1383
1131-1136
Smith, Dianna
e859097c-f9f5-4fd0-8b07-59218648e726
Kirkwood, Graham
f55ea391-6214-4c82-9146-990aec2c167f
Pott, Jason
cc0c7200-b4e9-4238-a1e7-70e68d6ea420
Kourita, Lida
8627932e-5cfe-4189-b8b5-acc039df2837
Jessop, Vanessa
101ca148-bbe9-4a5e-a296-413508a56880
Pollock, Allyson M.
444e0f44-a581-4f58-b9a7-c1d2b47f3805
Smith, Dianna
e859097c-f9f5-4fd0-8b07-59218648e726
Kirkwood, Graham
f55ea391-6214-4c82-9146-990aec2c167f
Pott, Jason
cc0c7200-b4e9-4238-a1e7-70e68d6ea420
Kourita, Lida
8627932e-5cfe-4189-b8b5-acc039df2837
Jessop, Vanessa
101ca148-bbe9-4a5e-a296-413508a56880
Pollock, Allyson M.
444e0f44-a581-4f58-b9a7-c1d2b47f3805

Smith, Dianna, Kirkwood, Graham, Pott, Jason, Kourita, Lida, Jessop, Vanessa and Pollock, Allyson M. (2015) Childhood injury in Tower Hamlets: audit of children presenting with injury to an inner city A&E department in London. Injury, 46 (6), 1131-1136. (doi:10.1016/j.injury.2014.12.029).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction

Childhood injury is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide with the most socio-economically deprived children at greatest risk. Current routine NHS hospital data collection in England is inadequate to inform or evaluate prevention strategies. A pilot study of enhanced data collection was conducted to assess the feasibility of collecting accident and emergency data for national injury surveillance.

Aims

To evaluate the reliability and feasibility of supplementary data collection using a paper-based questionnaire and to assess the potential relationship between income deprivation and incidence of paediatric injury.

Methods

Clinical staff conducted an audit of injuries in all patients under 16 years between June and December 2012 through completion of a questionnaire while taking the medical history. Descriptive statistics were produced for age, sex, time of arrival, activity at time of injury, mechanism and location of injuries. The association between known injury incidence and area level income deprivation (2010 English Index of Multiple Deprivation [IMD] Income Deprivation Domain from home postcode) was assessed using Spearman's rank correlation. Representativeness of the audit was measured using z-test statistics for time of arrival, age, sex and ethnicity.

Results

The paper audit captured 414 (6.5%) of the 6358 under-16 injury-related attendances recorded on the NHS Care Record Service Dataset. Comparison of the audit dataset with NHS records showed that the audit was not representative of the larger dataset except for sex of the patient. There was a positive correlation between injury incidence and income deprivation measured using IMD score where data were available (n = 384, p < 0.001). Nearly half of the attendances were due to falls, slips or trips (49.8%) and more than half were due to either leisure (32.9%) or sport (18.1%) activities.

Conclusion

There is evidence of area level income inequalities in injury incidence among children attending the Royal London Hospital. The audit failed to capture a high proportion of cases, likely due to the paper-based format used. This study highlights the importance of routinely collecting enhanced injury data in computerized hospital admission systems to provide the necessary evidence base for effective injury prevention. The findings have contributed to plans for implementation.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 24 December 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 January 2015
Published date: June 2015
Keywords: injury surveillance, paediatric injury, income deprivation
Organisations: Population, Health & Wellbeing (PHeW)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 382518
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382518
ISSN: 0020-1383
PURE UUID: 615dc771-37a1-4e3d-ad6c-ce131fc07b3e
ORCID for Dianna Smith: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0650-6606

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 27 Oct 2015 14:55
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:53

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Contributors

Author: Dianna Smith ORCID iD
Author: Graham Kirkwood
Author: Jason Pott
Author: Lida Kourita
Author: Vanessa Jessop
Author: Allyson M. Pollock

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