FAMILY, SOCIAL, AND CULTURAL FACTORS IN PEDESTRIAN INJURIES AMONG HISPANIC CHILDREN.

Author(s)
Agran, P.F. Winn, D.G. Anderson, C.L. & del Valle, C.
Year
Abstract

In an earlier population based surveillance study of pediatric injuries, the rate of Hispanic children injured as pedestrians was 63/100,000 compared with 17/100,000 for non-Hispanic white children. The present study was designed to examine the effect of family, social, and cultural factors on the rate of pedestrian injury in a population of Hispanic children in the southwestern US. A case-control study of pedestrian injuries among Hispanic children was used as the basis of the study. The sample consisted of 98 children 0-14 years of age hospitalized as a result of a pedestrian injury and 144 randomly selected a result of a pedestrian injury and 144 randomly selected neighborhood controls matched to the case by city, age, gender, and ethnicity. Cases were compared with controls using conditional logistic regression; in the study design the odds ratio (OR) estimates the incidence rate ratio.

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Publication

Library number
I 493160 /83 / IRRD 493160
Source

Injury Prevention. 1998 /09. 4(3) Pp188-93 (54 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.