A case-control study of pedestrian and bicyclist injuries in childhood.
I B Pless,
R Verreault and
S Tenina
Community Pediatric Research, Montreal Children's Hospital, Quebec.
We identified children ages 0 to 14 years injured in trafficas pedestrians or bicyclists in Montreal, Canada. Two hundredchildren with injuries who received a score of 2 or more onthe Maximum Abbreviated Injury Severity scale were consideredas cases and compared with 400 uninjured children seen in thesame hospitals for non-traumatic reasons. Systematic, blindedinterviews and tests were conducted with parents to determinethe role of a series of social, familial, personal, and behavioralcharacteristics. After adjustment for age, gender and socioeconomicarea of residence, logistic regression analyses showed higherrisks of injury to be related to fewer years of parents' education,a history of accident to a family member, an environment judgedas unsafe, and poor parental supervision. Absence of physicalhealth problems, fewer family preventive behaviors and reportedlack of cautiousness were also related to a higher risk, whereasneither aggressivity nor behavioral disturbance, whether internalizingor externalizing, showed any such relation. These data suggestthat the child's personality and behavior are weaker risk factorsfor pedestrian and bicyclist injuries than are family and neighborhoodcharacteristics.
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