University of Leicester
Browse
TC_Violent deaths, tarn emj letter.pdf (134.21 kB)

Need for a UK injury control strategy.

Download (134.21 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-27, 15:18 authored by Fiona Lecky, Antoinette Edwards, Dhushyanthan Surendra Kumar, Laura White, Timothy J Coats
Recently UK Public Health Strategy and media reporting has understandably been dominated by the fight against the Global COVID – 19 pandemic. Rates of new cases, admissions to hospital / critical care and deaths by setting – not just in hospital - are used to assess the success of infection control and calibrate the path out of lockdown. Like infection, the epidemiology of injury is related to human activity and behaviour, but injuries have remained the commonest cause of death for men aged 15-35 and women aged 10 to 30 for more than 20 years, and in 2020 are still likely to kill more people in these age groups than Covid-19. Injury deaths in older people from Traumatic Brain Injury are also on the rise The modern ‘epidemic’ of injury has attracted little media or government interest. We have specific road safety and violence reduction initiatives but no overarching national perspective, strategy or focus on reducing the UK injury burden.

History

Citation

Emergency Medicine Journal 2020;37:497.

Author affiliation

Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Emergency medicine journal : EMJ

Volume

37

Publisher

BMJ

issn

1472-0205

eissn

1472-0213

Acceptance date

2020-05-19

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2020-07-01

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

Publisher version

https://emj.bmj.com/content/37/8/497

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC