4.5 Review

Prevention of unintentional injuries in children under five years

Journal

BMC PEDIATRICS
Volume 21, Issue SUPPL 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12887-021-02517-2

Keywords

Prevention; Safety; Injuries; Traffic accident; Drowning; Poisoning; Burning; Accidental falls

Categories

Funding

  1. Friede Springer endowed professorship for Global Child Health at the Witten Herdecke University, Germany

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Preventive strategies for childhood injuries rely primarily on surveillance data and identifying risk factors. Key strategies for preventing unintentional injuries involve a combination of environmental and behavior modification, achieved through engineering, enforcement, and education. Evaluation of intervention effectiveness and compliance with recommendations is crucial in implementing these strategies.
We looked at existing recommendations for preventing unintentional injuries in children under five years of age, and we attempted to identify the main sources used as evidence for formulating these recommendations. We conducted a literature search up to the 18th October 2019 by using key terms and manual search in selected sources. We summarized the recommendations and source of the evidence in tables for each of five areas of unintentional injuries: road traffic injuries, drowning, poisoning, thermal injuries, falls. In 2008, the World Health Organization (WHO) published a comprehensive report with strategies for child injury prevention for the European region. More recently, the WHO published several guidance documents focused on one area such as drowning, usually with a global focus. The PrevInfad workgroup (Spanish Association of Primary Care Pediatrics) updated their document on road safety in April 2019, providing recommendations and a summary of the existing evidence. Preventive strategies for injuries in childhood are mainly based on surveillance data and the identification of risk factors. The key strategies for preventing unintentional injuries are a combination of environmental and behaviour modification, that can be achieved through engineering, enforcement and education. Consequently, for this kind of strategies, it is important to evaluate the effectiveness of both the intervention itself, and the way the intervention is advised to parents and caretakers so that there is good compliance of the recommendation.

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