Pedestrian traffic injuries among school children in Kawempe, Uganda.
نویسندگان
چکیده
BACKGROUND Traffic injuries are an important problem in low income countries. In Uganda road traffic is the largest single cause of injury in Kampala; pedestrians, and children are most affected. Pedestrian injury affects school children in Uganda. OBJECTIVE To determine the overall risk of pedestrian traffic injury among school children in Kawempe, Uganda. METHODS A cohort was assembled at 35 primary schools and followed for 3 terms. Ten of the schools had participated in previous injury programs, others were systematically selected. Injuries were recorded by teachers using a questionnaire. Data collected included ID, school, age, grade, gender, incident date, vehicle type, and injury outcome. Demographic characteristics are described and cumulative incidences calculated. RESULTS The cohort included 8,165 children (49% male) from 35 primary schools. The mean age was 9 years (Sd=2.78). Of the 35 schools, 92% were day; the others mixed day and boarding. 53 children (27 girls) were involved in a traffic incident. 25% of the injuries reported were serious and warranted care in a health facility. No deaths occurred. Forty % of incidents involved commercial motorcycles, 41% bicycles, 9% cars, 8% taxis, and 2% trucks. The cumulative incidence was 0.168% each term. Over the 3 terms of the year the cumulative incidence was 0.5 +/- 0.02. There were no gender differences in the cumulative incidence. CONCLUSION Each school year about 1/2 % of Kawempe school children are involved in a traffic incident. Interventions are necessary to reduce the unacceptably high incidents of pedestrian traffic. Interventions to alleviate this situation including safer routes, teaching skills of road crossing to children as well as better regulation and road safety education to two wheelers could reduce the unacceptably high incidents of pedestrian traffic injury.
منابع مشابه
Pedestrian injuries in school-attending children: a comparison of injury data sources in a low-income setting.
OBJECTIVE To estimate and compare the rate of pedestrian injuries in primary school-attending children of urban Uganda using different data sources. DESIGN Data collection from a hospital-based trauma registry, police data, teacher reports, and a cross-sectional community-based survey. SETTING Kawempe, the largest urban district in the capital Kampala, Uganda. Patients or SUBJECTS Primary...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- African health sciences
دوره 8 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2008