Epidemiology and severity of injuries caused by road traffic accidents in the metropolitan area of Rome.

Author(s)
Costanzo, A. Messina, J. Taggi, F. Pitidis, A. Natalini, E. Stagnitti, F. Calderale, S. & Ribaldi, S.
Year
Abstract

The mortality rate due to road traffic accidents is 113 deaths per 100,000 inhabitants during 1994 in the area; morbidity incidence (per 100,000 inhabitants) we estimate to be 1,170 arrivals to first-aid centers and 263 hospitalizations during 1997. The cases at General Hospital "Umberto 1" during 1997 represent about one-third of the whole area. In severe cases (ISS greater than 16) 15-29 year-old males account for modal value; women are concentrated at elder age, and males represent 72% of the total number. Vehicle type and sex are determinants of the risk of severe trauma. There is a strong linear relationship between age, severity, and lethality rate (R2 = 0.88), but severity is the variable that plays the major role on lethality. These variables (age, severity, and lethality rate) are crucial to define death risk. Most deaths occur within the early 24 hours of hospitalization. Lethality reflects a system failure phenomenon with critical points at 24 hours and after 7 days since the accident. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I E116019 /80 /84 / ITRD E116019
Source

Traffic Injury Prevention. 2002. 3(4) Pp311-5 (15 Refs.)

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.