Background: Childhood injury is a leading cause of hospitalisation, yet there has been no comprehensive examination of child injury and survival over time in Australia. To examine the characteristics, temporal trend and survival for children who were hospitalised as a result of injury in Australia. Method: A retrospective examination of linked hospitalisation and mortality data for injured children aged 16 years or less during 1 July 2001 to 30 June 2012. Negative binomial regression examined change in injury hospitalisation trends. Cox proportional hazard regression examined the association of risk factors on 30-day survival. Results: There were 686409 injury hospitalisations,with an age-standardised rate of 1489 per 100000 population (95%...
Objective: To explore the relationship between child injury morbidity and socioeconomic status. Desi...
Objective: To describe the leading mechanisms of hospitalised unintentional injury in Australian Abo...
Background: Injury is a leading cause of death and disability for children. Regionalised trauma syst...
Objective: To examine the magnitude, 10‐year temporal trends and treatment cost of intentional injur...
Paediatric trauma centres seek to optimise the care of injured children. Trends in state-wide paedia...
BACKGROUND:Information about children treated in New South Wales (NSW), Australia following major in...
Objective: To analyse changes in the incidence of injuries requiring hospitalisation for child passe...
Specific childhood injury types are ranked by occurrence rate for mortality, hospital admission and ...
Abstract Objective: To examine the magnitude, 10‐year temporal trends and treatment cost of intentio...
This report provides summary data on hospitalised injury of children and young people (aged 0-17 ye...
Objective: To describe the rates of hospitalisation for head and traumatic brain injury among Austra...
The aim of this study is to review patient characteristics, injury patterns, and outcomes of trauma ...
Specific childhood injury types are ranked by occurrence rate for mortality, hospital admission and ...
Abstract Background Childhood injury remains a significant public health problem responsible for sig...
Background: The majority of paediatric injury outcomes studies focus on mortality rather than the im...
Objective: To explore the relationship between child injury morbidity and socioeconomic status. Desi...
Objective: To describe the leading mechanisms of hospitalised unintentional injury in Australian Abo...
Background: Injury is a leading cause of death and disability for children. Regionalised trauma syst...
Objective: To examine the magnitude, 10‐year temporal trends and treatment cost of intentional injur...
Paediatric trauma centres seek to optimise the care of injured children. Trends in state-wide paedia...
BACKGROUND:Information about children treated in New South Wales (NSW), Australia following major in...
Objective: To analyse changes in the incidence of injuries requiring hospitalisation for child passe...
Specific childhood injury types are ranked by occurrence rate for mortality, hospital admission and ...
Abstract Objective: To examine the magnitude, 10‐year temporal trends and treatment cost of intentio...
This report provides summary data on hospitalised injury of children and young people (aged 0-17 ye...
Objective: To describe the rates of hospitalisation for head and traumatic brain injury among Austra...
The aim of this study is to review patient characteristics, injury patterns, and outcomes of trauma ...
Specific childhood injury types are ranked by occurrence rate for mortality, hospital admission and ...
Abstract Background Childhood injury remains a significant public health problem responsible for sig...
Background: The majority of paediatric injury outcomes studies focus on mortality rather than the im...
Objective: To explore the relationship between child injury morbidity and socioeconomic status. Desi...
Objective: To describe the leading mechanisms of hospitalised unintentional injury in Australian Abo...
Background: Injury is a leading cause of death and disability for children. Regionalised trauma syst...