COVID-19 大流行期间安大略省儿童和青少年遭受的暴力伤害

Alexia Medeiros , Lennon Li , Brendan T. Smith , Sarah Carsley , Alex Zheng , Ian Pike , Alison K. Macpherson , Justin Thielman , Ashini Weerasinghe , Shazya Karmali , Natasha Saunders , Sarah A. Richmond
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景假设在 COVID-19 大流行期间,由于家庭压力增加,留守政策将对儿童和青少年中的暴力、虐待和忽视病例产生影响。方法我们采用间断时间序列设计来模拟大流行之前和期间每月与暴力相关的急诊室就诊和住院人数的变化。结果在对研究期间的季节性和人口变化进行调整后,我们观察到在大流行病政策实施后,与暴力相关的急诊就诊人数立即减少了 56%(RR:0.44,95%CI:0.38,0.50),住院人数减少了 35%(RR:0.65,95%CI:0.52,0.82),随后呈温和增长趋势。我们观察到,大流行病政策对与暴力有关的急诊室就诊率和住院率的影响在性别、年龄或物质匮乏程度方面没有差异;但是,在研究期间,10-19 岁男性和物质匮乏程度较高的五分位数人群的平均受伤率高于女性、年龄较小的人群和物质匮乏程度较低的五分位数人群。随后,与暴力相关的伤害有所增加,接近大流行前的水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Inflicted violence-related injuries among children and youth in ontario during the COVID-19 pandemic

Background

During the COVID-19 pandemic, it was hypothesized that stay-at-home policies would impact cases of violence, abuse, and neglect among children and youth due to increased familial stressors.

Objective

We examined the effect of the implementation of pandemic policies on violence-related emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalizations among youth.

Participants

Violence-related ED visits and hospitalizations among children and youth ages 0–19 in Ontario, Canada were obtained from April 2015 until the most recent available date, March 31, 2022.

Methods

We used an interrupted time series design to model the change in monthly violence-related ED visits and hospitalizations before and during the pandemic. We used negative binomial models to estimate the immediate effect of the policy and the change in the number of injuries during the pandemic.

Results

After adjusting for seasonality and population changes over our study period, we observed a 56% decrease in violence-related ED visits (RR: 0.44, 95%CI: 0.38, 0.50) and a 35% decrease in hospitalizations (RR: 0.65, 95%CI: 0.52, 0.82) immediately after the implementation of the pandemic policy, followed by moderate increasing trends. We observed no difference in the effect of the pandemic policies on the rate of violence-related ED visits and hospitalizations by sex, age or material deprivation; however, males aged 10–19 years and those in higher quintiles of material deprivation had higher average rates of injuries compared to females, those in younger age groups and lower quintiles of deprivation over the study period.

Conclusions

We observed an abrupt decrease in the rate of violence-related ED visits and hospitalizations immediately after the onset of pandemic policies in Ontario. Following this, violence-related injuries increased, approaching pre-pandemic levels.

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