Canadian water-related fatalities: Demographic, situational, and environmental risk factors.

IF 1.8
Vienna Chichi Lam, James Bryan Kinney, Lisa Hanson Ouelette, Barbara Byers, Gail Scott Anderson
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Abstract

Unintentional water-related deaths are an ongoing global problem, despite being named by the United Nations as one of the leading preventable causes of death. To address the need for enhanced analysis of drowning risk factors, including demographic and situational conditions that may influence death outcomes, this research involved a three-phase multimodal risk assessment by utilizing unintentional water-related death records (n = 5105) from all Canadian provinces and territories from Jan 2006 to Dec 2016, census boundaries, hydrological shape files, and spectrum management data on all cellular towers. These were all accidental fatalities, where decedent demographics, situational case factors, and environmental conditions are known, including whether a rescue attempt occurred. It is believed that those who had a rescue attempt were better situated to have favorable outcomes but were unable to survive. Binary logistic regression shows that Indigenous persons experience 1.9× greater risk of not being rescued. Alcohol involvement doubled the risk of not being rescued. Differences in rescue likelihood by age were observed for youth, where there are greater expectations of guardianship. Results highlight the risk of being alone, and minors were found to be ineffectual interveners. Perimortem activities also show how many of these deaths involved unintentional water entry. Seasonal and temporal analyses reveal risky peak times during evenings and weekends and demonstrate the importance of per capita calculations in comparing risk between differently sized populations. Last, a novel approach was devised to stratify risk based on the probability of accessing cellular reception for emergency medical services at drowning locations.

加拿大与水有关的死亡:人口、情景和环境风险因素。
与水有关的意外死亡是一个持续存在的全球问题,尽管联合国将其列为可预防的主要死亡原因之一。为了满足加强溺水风险因素分析的需求,包括可能影响死亡结果的人口统计和情境条件,本研究通过利用2006年1月至2016年12月加拿大所有省份和地区的意外与水有关的死亡记录(n = 5105)、人口普查边界、水文形状文件和所有蜂窝塔的频谱管理数据,进行了三阶段多模式风险评估。这些都是意外死亡,死者的人口统计数据、情况因素和环境条件都是已知的,包括是否发生了救援尝试。人们认为,那些尝试过救援的人更有可能获得有利的结果,但却无法生存。二元逻辑回归显示,原住民无法获救的风险高出1.9倍。酗酒使无法获救的风险增加了一倍。不同年龄的年轻人在救援可能性上存在差异,他们对监护的期望更高。结果强调了独处的风险,未成年人被发现是无效的干预者。死前活动也显示出这些死亡中有多少是无意进水造成的。季节性和时间分析揭示了晚上和周末的危险高峰时间,并证明了人均计算在比较不同规模人口之间的风险方面的重要性。最后,设计了一种基于在溺水地点获得紧急医疗服务的蜂窝接收概率的新方法来对风险进行分层。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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