Title of article
A new approach to understanding pediatric farm injuries
Author/Authors
Barbara A. Morrongiello، نويسنده , , Barbara Marlenga، نويسنده , , Richard Berg، نويسنده , , James Linneman، نويسنده , , William Pickett، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
8
From page
1364
To page
1371
Abstract
The objective of this study was to apply a new conceptual approach to the study of pediatric farm injuries. A large case series of pediatric farm injuries in North America was evaluated to assess interactions between risk factors for injury. Information about pediatric farm injuries to children in three age groups (<6 years, 6–12 years, 13+ years) was coded with respect to childrenʹs behavior (did unexpected child behavior contribute to injury?), predictability of injury risk (based on what the child had been doing, was the nature or occurrence of injury unexpected?), environmental events (did unexpected environmental events contribute to injury?), and level of environmental risk (low, high). The reliability of coding between independent raters was excellent (κ=.83) for the 330 cases providing complete data. Results revealed that, in high-risk environments, unexpected child behavior was coded more frequently when children under 6 years were injured than for older children, whereas in low-risk environments unexpected child behavior had less impact on injury risk and showed no such age variation. With increasing age, the predictability of injury increased in a high-risk context, suggesting that youth engage in increasingly hazardous activities as they develop. Consistent with this interpretation, unexpected environmental events increasingly contributed to injury in a high-risk context in the oldest age groups. The observed variations in risk factors suggest that interactions between behavioral and environmental factors are important to consider in studies of the etiology of pediatric farm injuries.
Keywords
risk factors , Interactions , Farm injuries , Canada , US , children
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
603515
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