Relation of child, caregiver, and environmental characteristics to childhood injury in an urban Aboriginal cohort in New South Wales, Australia
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Date
Authors
Thurber, Katherine
Burgess, Leonie
Falster, Kathleen
Banks, Emily
Moller, Holger
Ivers, Rebecca
Cowell, Christopher
Issac, Vivian
Kalucy, Deanna
Fernando, Peter
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley Open Access
Abstract
Objective
: Despite being disproportionately affected by injury, little is known about factors
associated with injury in Aboriginal children. We investigated factors associated with injury
among urban Aboriginal children attending four Aboriginal Community Controlled Health
Services in New South Wales, Australia.
Methods
: We examined characteristics of caregiver-reported child injury, and calculated
prevalence ratios of ‘ever-injury’ by child, family, and environmental factors.
Results
: Among children in the cohort, 29% (n=373/1,303) had ever broken a bone, been
knocked out, required stitches or been hospitalised for a burn or poisoning; 40–78% of first
injuries occurred at home and 60–91% were treated in hospital. Reported ever-injury was
significantly lower (prevalence ratio ≤0.80) among children who were female, younger,
whose caregiver had low psychological distress and had not been imprisoned, whose
family experienced few major life events, and who hadn’t experienced alcohol misuse in the
household or theft in the community, compared to other cohort members.
Conclusions
: In this urban Aboriginal child cohort, injury was common and associated with
measures of family and community vulnerability.
Implications for public health
: Prevention efforts targeting upstream injury determinants and
Aboriginal children living in vulnerable families may reduce child injury. Existing broad-based
intervention programs for vulnerable families may present opportunities to deliver targeted
injury prevention.
Key words
: Aboriginal child health, child injury, social determinants of health, injury
prevention, Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0 International