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Reducing accident death rates in children and young adults - the contribution of hospital care.

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Reducing accident death rates in children and young adults - the contribution of hospital care. / Roberts, Ian; Campbell, Fiona; Hollis, Sally et al.
In: BMJ, Vol. 313, No. 7067, 16.11.1996, p. 1239-1241.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Roberts, I, Campbell, F, Hollis, S & Yates, DW 1996, 'Reducing accident death rates in children and young adults - the contribution of hospital care.', BMJ, vol. 313, no. 7067, pp. 1239-1241. <http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/313/7067/1239>

APA

Vancouver

Roberts I, Campbell F, Hollis S, Yates DW. Reducing accident death rates in children and young adults - the contribution of hospital care. BMJ. 1996 Nov 16;313(7067):1239-1241.

Author

Roberts, Ian ; Campbell, Fiona ; Hollis, Sally et al. / Reducing accident death rates in children and young adults - the contribution of hospital care. In: BMJ. 1996 ; Vol. 313, No. 7067. pp. 1239-1241.

Bibtex

@article{5eb8fada735745f3ae4afea1569f31b8,
title = "Reducing accident death rates in children and young adults - the contribution of hospital care.",
abstract = "Objective: To assess the contribution of trauma care to the recent decline in accident death rates among children and young people. Design: Logistic regression modelling of temporal trends in the probability of death in patients admitted to hospital for the treatment of severe injury. Setting: Hospitals participating the United Kingdom major trauma outcome study. Subjects: 3230 patients with an injury severity score of 16 or more, who were admitted for more than three days, transferred or admitted to intensive care, or died from their injuries. Main outcome measures: Death or survival in hospital within three months of injury. Results: Over the seven year period 1989-95 there was a substantial decline in the probability of death among children and young adults admitted to hospital after severe injury. The overall estimate of the reduction in the odds of death was 16% per year (odds ratio for the yearly trend 0.84; 95% confidence interval 0.79 to 0.89). This decline did not differ significantly between age groups. (0-4 years 0.79; 5-14 years 0.87; 15-24 years 0.83). Conclusions: Reductions in hospital case fatality have made an important contribution to reaching the Health of the Nation targets. The contribution of hospital care in the reduction of accident mortality should be taken into account in decisions about the allocation of resources to preventive and curative services.",
author = "Ian Roberts and Fiona Campbell and Sally Hollis and Yates, {David W.}",
year = "1996",
month = nov,
day = "16",
language = "English",
volume = "313",
pages = "1239--1241",
journal = "BMJ",
issn = "0959-8138",
publisher = "British Medical Association",
number = "7067",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Reducing accident death rates in children and young adults - the contribution of hospital care.

AU - Roberts, Ian

AU - Campbell, Fiona

AU - Hollis, Sally

AU - Yates, David W.

PY - 1996/11/16

Y1 - 1996/11/16

N2 - Objective: To assess the contribution of trauma care to the recent decline in accident death rates among children and young people. Design: Logistic regression modelling of temporal trends in the probability of death in patients admitted to hospital for the treatment of severe injury. Setting: Hospitals participating the United Kingdom major trauma outcome study. Subjects: 3230 patients with an injury severity score of 16 or more, who were admitted for more than three days, transferred or admitted to intensive care, or died from their injuries. Main outcome measures: Death or survival in hospital within three months of injury. Results: Over the seven year period 1989-95 there was a substantial decline in the probability of death among children and young adults admitted to hospital after severe injury. The overall estimate of the reduction in the odds of death was 16% per year (odds ratio for the yearly trend 0.84; 95% confidence interval 0.79 to 0.89). This decline did not differ significantly between age groups. (0-4 years 0.79; 5-14 years 0.87; 15-24 years 0.83). Conclusions: Reductions in hospital case fatality have made an important contribution to reaching the Health of the Nation targets. The contribution of hospital care in the reduction of accident mortality should be taken into account in decisions about the allocation of resources to preventive and curative services.

AB - Objective: To assess the contribution of trauma care to the recent decline in accident death rates among children and young people. Design: Logistic regression modelling of temporal trends in the probability of death in patients admitted to hospital for the treatment of severe injury. Setting: Hospitals participating the United Kingdom major trauma outcome study. Subjects: 3230 patients with an injury severity score of 16 or more, who were admitted for more than three days, transferred or admitted to intensive care, or died from their injuries. Main outcome measures: Death or survival in hospital within three months of injury. Results: Over the seven year period 1989-95 there was a substantial decline in the probability of death among children and young adults admitted to hospital after severe injury. The overall estimate of the reduction in the odds of death was 16% per year (odds ratio for the yearly trend 0.84; 95% confidence interval 0.79 to 0.89). This decline did not differ significantly between age groups. (0-4 years 0.79; 5-14 years 0.87; 15-24 years 0.83). Conclusions: Reductions in hospital case fatality have made an important contribution to reaching the Health of the Nation targets. The contribution of hospital care in the reduction of accident mortality should be taken into account in decisions about the allocation of resources to preventive and curative services.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 313

SP - 1239

EP - 1241

JO - BMJ

JF - BMJ

SN - 0959-8138

IS - 7067

ER -