Death rates from unintentional injury among children dropped by nearly 30 percent in 10 years

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Injuries remain number one killer of youth

Death rates from unintentional injuries among children and  adolescents from birth to age 19 declined by nearly 30 percent from 2000 to  2009, according to a new Vital Signs report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

However, more than 9,000 children lost their lives as a  result of unintentional injury in the United States in 2009. And although rates  for most causes of child injuries have been dropping, suffocation rates are on  the rise, with a 54 percent increase in reported suffocation among infants less  than 1 year old, the report says.  Poisoning  death rates also increased, with a 91 percent increase among teens aged 15-19,  largely due to prescription drug overdose, it said.

This Vital Signs report is CDC’s first  study to show fatal unintentional injury trends by cause and by state for  children from birth to 19 years. The most common cause of death from  unintentional injury for children is motor vehicle crashes; other leading  causes include suffocation, drowning, poisoning, fires, and falls.

“Kids are safer from injuries  today than ever before. In fact, the decrease in injury death rates in the past  decade has resulted in more than 11,000 children’s lives being saved,” said CDC  Director Thomas Frieden, M.D., M.P.H. “But we can do more. It’s tragic and  unacceptable when we lose even one child to an avoidable injury.”

 

Child injury death rates varied substantially by state in  2009, ranging from less than 5 deaths per 100,000 children in Massachusetts and  New Jersey to more than 23 deaths per 100,000 children in South Dakota and  Mississippi.

 

Death rates from motor vehicle crashes dropped by 41 percent  from 2000-2009. Several factors have played a role in this reduction, including  improvements in child safety and booster seat use and use of graduated drivers  licensing systems for teen drivers. However, crashes remain the leading cause  of unintentional injury death for children.

Poisoning deaths have been steadily increasing among 15- to  19 year-olds, largely due to prescription drug overdoses. According to other  CDC research, appropriate prescribing, proper storage and disposal,  discouraging medication sharing, and state-based prescription drug monitoring  programs could reduce these deaths. The increase in suffocation deaths among  infants could be curbed by following the American Academy of Pediatrics’  recommendations for safe infant sleeping environments. These recommendations  state that infants should sleep in safe cribs, alone, on their backs, with no  loose bedding or soft toys.

“Every 4 seconds, a child is treated for an injury in the  emergency department, and every hour, a child dies as a result of an injury,”  said Linda C. Degutis, Dr.P.H., M.S.N., director of CDC′s National Center for Injury  Prevention and Control. “Child injury remains a serious problem in which  everyone –including parents, state health officials, health care providers,  government and community groups – has a critical role to play to protect and  save the lives of our young people.”

CDC and more than 60 partner organizations are releasing  a National Action Plan on Child Injury Prevention in conjunction with the Vital  Signs report. The National Action Plan’s overall goals are to:

  • Raise  awareness about the problem of child injury and the effects on our nation.
  • Highlight  prevention solutions by uniting stakeholders around a common set of goals and  strategies.
  • Mobilize  action on a national, coordinated effort to reduce child injury.

 

For a copy of the plan and more information about child  injury prevention, visit www.cdc.gov/safechild.

CDC Vital  Signs is a report that appears each month as part of the CDC journal Morbidity and  Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR). The report provides the latest data  and information on key health indicators such as cancer prevention, obesity,  tobacco use, alcohol use, prescription drug overdose, HIV/AIDS, motor vehicle  safety, health care-associated infections, cardiovascular health, teen  pregnancy, child injuries, and food safety.

 

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