Prevalence, circumstances and consequences of non-fatal road traffi c injuries and other bodily injuries among older people in China, Ghana, India, Mexico, Russia and South Africa

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Keywords:

injury, traffic, ageing, China, Ghana, India, Mexico, Russian Federation, South Africa

Abstract

Unintentional injuries are one of the main contributors to mortality and disability in elderly
populations in low- and middle-income countries. The aim of this study was to examine the annual
road traffic and other bodily (not including falls) injury prevalence and associated risk factors
among older adults across six lower and upper middle-income countries. A cross-sectional
survey involving face-to-face household interviews were conducted in China (n=13,177), Ghana
(n=4305), India (n=6560), Mexico (n=2318), the Russian Federation (n=3938) and South Africa
(n=3840), resulting in population-based cohorts of persons aged 50+ years. Measures included
questions on injury, self-rated visual difficulties, alcohol use, depression treatment, sleeping problems, self-reported health status, and vision assessment using LogMAR (logarithm of
Minimum Angle of Resolution) eye charts. It comprises rows of letters and is used to measure
visual acuity. Results indicate that the overall annual non-fatal road traffic injury prevalence
was 2.0% and for other bodily injury 2.1% (not including falls) across the six countries. The
multivariate logistic regression analysis found that residing in a rural area, taking medications
or other treatment for depression in the past 12 months and having a sleeping problem were
associated with road traffic injury, while younger age, residing in a rural area, hazardous or
harmful alcohol use and having a sleeping problem were associated with other bodily injury.
Visual impairment was not associated with prevalence of road traffic injuries. This study provides
the burden of non-fatal road traffic injury and other bodily injury and their associated risk factors
across the six countries’ studies. The findings of this study improves the understanding of nonfatal
road traffic injury and other bodily injury upon which policy makers, programme developers
and researchers in public health can design strategic interventions to reduce these preventable
injuries as well as improve safety associated with unintentional injuries.

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Published

2023-05-23

How to Cite

Peltzer, K., Phaswana-Mafuya, N., Arokiasamy, P., Biritwum, R., Yawson, A., Minicuci, N., Stewart Williams, J., Kowal, P., Chatterji, S., & SAGE Collaborating Group. (2015). Prevalence, circumstances and consequences of non-fatal road traffi c injuries and other bodily injuries among older people in China, Ghana, India, Mexico, Russia and South Africa. Social and Health Sciences, 13(2), 59–77. Retrieved from https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/SaHS/article/view/13737

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Articles