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Injuries causing death: Their nature,external causes,and associated diseases
Authors:Ronald F. Chamblee  Marshall C. Evans  Donna G. Patten  June S. Pearce
Affiliation:1. Ronald F. Chamblee is a Demographic Statistician. Technical Services Branch, Division of Vital Statistics. National Center for Health Statistics, P.O. Box 12214. Research Triangle Park. NC 27709 USA;2. Marshall C. Evans is Chief of the Technical Services Branch, Division of Vital Statistics USA;3. Donna G. Patten is a Survey Statistician with the Branch and June S. Pearce is a Nosology Specialist. Data Preparation Branch. Division of Data Processing USA
Abstract:This article provides national data on the types of injuries reported on death certificates, the external causes of these injuries, and diseases that are frequently reported with them. Injuries were a factor in 11 % (213,366 deaths) of the deaths to residents of the United States in 1978. Of 11 broad categories of injuries, three (fractures, sprains, strains, and dislocations, intracranial injuries, and adverse effects) were mentioned on almost 50,000 deaths each. There was considerable variation in the distribution of injury types by age, sex, and race. The most notable example was fractures of the lower limb which were mentioned on 29% of the deaths involving an injury to 65 + year olds but no less than 5% of such deaths for all other age groups. For white females, the percentage with a fracture of the lower limb was 23 % compared to 12 % overall. In 25 % of the deaths involving an injury, the immediate cause was a motor vehicle accident. In 51 %, the immediate cause of the injury was a non-motor-vehicle accident. In 73 % of the deaths involving non-motor-vehicle accidents, disease conditions as well as injuries were a factor; and, 69% of the time, the disease condition was actually the underlying cause of the death with the injury being a contributing factor or complication. For example, over 14,000 deaths in 1978 involved a circulatory condition as the underlying cause of death which was complicated by an accidental fracture, sprain, or dislocation. Although diseases more often assumed the role of the underlying cause of death, they were also a nonunderlying cause in 24,000 non-motor-vehicle accident deaths. Over 12,000 of such deaths involved circulatory diseases.
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