INJURIES IN THE NATIONAL CAPITAL REGION – A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY OF THE CHALLENGING EPIDEMIC.
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Published:2022-11-01
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Volume:
Page:5-8
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ISSN:
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Container-title:INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
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language:en
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Short-container-title:ijsr
Author:
Mohan R Ram1, Suman Babu Vaddi2, Biradar Shivasharana3, Jha Shreeja4
Affiliation:
1. M.S. MCh Plastic Surgery, Associate Professor, Department of Burns and Plastic Surgery, ABVIMS & Dr.RMLHospital, New Delhi 110001 2. M.S. MCh Plastic Surgery, Assistant Professor, Department of Burns and Plastic Surgery, ABVIMS & Dr.RMLHospital New Delhi 110001 3. MS General Surgery, Senior resident, Department of Burns and Plastic Surgery, ABVIMS & Dr.RMLHospital, New Delhi 110001 4. MBBS, Karturba Medical College, Manipal, Karnataka 576104
Abstract
Background: Injuries are an emerging public health problem that has grown into epidemic proportions. Many injuries are linked to social,
environmental, cultural, and biological issues in causation; recognized as man-made and behaviour-linked disorders, and linked to sociodemographic transition. Prevention, acute care, and rehabilitation are the major challenges we are facing today. Materials & Methods: A crosssectional study was conducted at the National Injury Surveillance Centre (NISC) Department of Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital, New Delhi.
Data was collected from 2861 participants (>18 years) of injury cases during 12 months (Jan-Dec 2019). Participants were selected using the
Convenience Sampling Technique. The data were analysed statistically using SPSS software to assess the risk factors and pattern of injury among
the population of the National Capital Region, Delhi. Results: In this study, the mean age was 36.6 years. The male to female ratio was 2.1:0.7. The
age group 18-45 years is affected predominantly (71.1%). Around 48.8% were students (matriculation/junior school). 39.5% (1131) were
unemployed. 1999 (69.9%) were accidental (unintentional), 1671 (58.4%) were having moderate to severe injury, 1675 (58.5%) happened onroad, and 1341 (46.9%) were having soft tissue injury. 1198 (41.9%) were RTI cases and 816 (28.5%) were assault/quarrel cases, the second most
common mode of injury. Conclusion: With the realization that injuries are caused by a complex interaction among agents (vehicle, product), and
human and environmental factors operating in complex social and economic systems, injury prevention and control depending on evidence-based
research is gaining momentum. There is an urgent need for developing comprehensive, integrated, and intersectoral approaches based on scientic
understanding.
Publisher
World Wide Journals
Subject
General Dentistry,Information Systems,Theoretical Computer Science,Software,Computer Networks and Communications,Software,Artificial Intelligence,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition,Software,Mechanics of Materials,Civil and Structural Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Civil and Structural Engineering,Education,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education,Biochemistry,Drug Discovery,Molecular Medicine,Biochemistry,Bioengineering,Analytical Chemistry
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