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Nonfatal farm injury incidence and disability to children: a systematic review.
Authors
Reed-DB; Claunch-DT
Source
Am J Prev Med 2000 May; 18(4S):70-79
Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0749-3797(00)00143-4 
NIOSHTIC No.
20000805 
Abstract
To summarize the literature on farm child nonfatal injury incidence and the subsequent disability to children. We used a systematic process to search the following databases: MEDLINE, EMBASE, ERIC, NTIS and NIOSHTIC. The reference lists from each potentially eligible study were checked and experts in the field contacted for additional reports. Studies for selection had to meet the following criteria: published in the last 20 years (1979-1998); located in North America; and include nonfatal farm injury cases for children under age 20. Thirty-two studies met the inclusion criteria and were examined for study design, location, sample size, injury rate, injury sources, and functional outcomes. Among the 32 studies, there were 9 case series, 11 secondary analyses of administrative databases, 2 case-control studies, 6 cross-sectional surveys, one mixed -method study, 2 prospective case series reports, and 1 cohort study. Twenty-two of the studies confined the sample to agriculture, but nine of these combined children within a larger sample, creating considerable difficulty in examining only agricultural injuries to children. Only one study focused on outcome measurement. Although nearly all the reports provided some discussion about injury severity, these comments were generally limited to injury severity scores or injury type. Despite increasing attention on farm-related child injury, the literature continues to report primarily descriptive studies that rely on small samples focusing on the nature of the injury event and immediate consequences. Analysis of larger databases, such as worker compensation claims, trauma registries, and agricultural injury surveillance, still lacks valid denominators; thus, incidence rates cannot be calculated. Very little was found regarding disability among children who experienced agricultural injury, even though the literature clearly proclaims the severity and seriousness of child injury on farms. To complete the portrait of the burden of this continuing problem, research must include functional outcome measures.
Keywords
Accident-prevention; Literature-review; Farm-workers; Injury-prevention; Accidents; Occupational-accidents; Agricultural-industry
Contact
University of Kentucky, College of Medicine, Department of Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health, Lexington, Kentucky
CODEN
AJPMEA
Publication Date
20000501
Document Type
Journal Article
Email Address
dbreed01@pop.uky.edu
Funding Type
Grant; Agriculture
Fiscal Year
2000
NTIS Accession No.
NTIS Price
Identifying No.
Grant-Number-R01-CCR-414307
ISSN
0749-3797
NIOSH Division
OD
Source Name
American Journal of Preventive Medicine
State
KY; GA
Performing Organization
University of Kentucky, College of Medicine, Department of Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health, Lexington, Kentucky
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