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Rates and ratios of fatal and nonfatal drowning attended by ambulance in New South Wales, Australia between 2010 and 2021.

Authors :
Mead, Edwina
Shu, Chen-Chun
Sarrami, Pooria
Macniven, Rona
Dinh, Michael
Alkhouri, Hatem
Daniel, Lovana
Peden, Amy E.
Source :
Journal of Safety Research. Dec2024, Vol. 91, p373-380. 8p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• Despite high burden, significantly less is known about non-fatal drowning. • Using data linkage, cases of non-fatal drowning from the pre-hospital setting were analysed. • For every one drowning fatality, 15 non-fatal drownings were attended by ambulance. • Despite lower fatalities, drowning burden among adolescents and females is revealed when analysing non-fatal drowning data. • Results indicate a need to widen primary prevention efforts across population groups. Introduction : Drowning is a preventable cause of mortality, with 279 unintentional drowning deaths per year in Australia. Despite larger estimated numbers, less is known about nonfatal drowning compared to fatalities. This study aimed to examine the burden of fatal and nonfatal drowning in the Australian state of New South Wales using pre-hospital case capture. Methods: A cross-sectional analysis of individuals attended by an ambulance in NSW for drowning between 2010 and 2021 was conducted. Ambulance data (paper-based and electronic medical records) were linked to emergency department and death registry. Ratios of fatal to nonfatal drowning were constructed overall, by sex, age, and remoteness of incident and residential locations. Results: 3,973 ambulance-attended drowning patients were identified (an annual rate of 4.16/100,000 persons). Six percent (6.1%; n = 243) died within 30 days, 82.7% (n = 201) of which died on the day of incident, including at the scene. Mean survival time for those who died between 2 and 30 days was 4.6 days. The overall ratio of fatal to nonfatal incidents was 1:15. Ratios were highest for 10–19 year-olds (1:77), females (1:22), and in metropolitan incident (1:20) and residential (1:23) locations. Across the study drowning declined by 14 incidents and 0.18 fatalities per year. Discussion: Temporal trends indicate declining drowning incidents and fatalities. However, this study highlights significant numbers of nonfatal incidents among those traditionally seen as lower risk, such as adolescents and females, necessitating a widened focus on improving water safety among these groups. Conclusions: Nonfatal drowning results in significant, yet preventable health system burden in New South Wales. Practical Applications: This study highlights the importance of documenting the full burden of drowning, including health system impacts of a preventable cause of injury and death. Such data may be used to encourage further investment in primary prevention efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00224375
Volume :
91
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Safety Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181440911
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsr.2024.09.019