original article

Oman Medical Journal [2020], Vol. 35, No. 1: e85 

Home Accidents among Children: A Retrospective Study at a Tertiary Care Center in Oman

Alya Al Rumhi*, Huda Al Awisi, Mahmood Al Buwaiqi and Salim Al Rabaani

Nursing Department, Sultan Qaboos University Hospital, Muscat, Oman

article info

Abstract

Objectives: We sought to identify the prevalence, commonest causes, and severity of home accident injuries and their effects on children who present to the emergency department (ED) of a university-tertiary hospital in Oman. Methods: We conducted a retrospective study among children aged ≤ 18 years old who presented with home accidents to the ED between January and June 2017. A checklist for data collection was designed to include demographic data, causes and effects of home accidents, and treatment outcomes. The data was retrieved from the hospital electronic patient records. Results: A total of 1333 children presented to the ED over six months as a result of unintentional home accidents, giving a prevalence of 7.7% from all children who visited the ED. There was a significant male to female ratio of 1.7:1. The most prevalent causes for home accidents were ‘falls’ in 716 (53.7%) children, followed by ‘struck by/against-animate/inanimate mechanical force’ in 201 (15.1%) children. ‘Poisoning’ was the third major cause in 117 (8.8%) children. Severity scale showed that around 36.0% of children suffered from severe injuries and 5.4% were admitted to the hospital. Conclusions: Despite this study being a single-center study in Oman, it indicates a high prevalence and severity of unintentional home accidents among children. The study findings suggest the need for implementing strategies to raise public awareness of child safety at home and to improve the preparedness of healthcare providers in ED to deal with such accidents.

Globally, home accidents are a leading cause of preventable disabilities and death among children and young people.1 There are many definitions of accidents found in the literature. The World Health Organization define an accident as an event “that occurs unwillingly and causes physical and mental damage by sudden external force”.2 The focus of this study is on unintentional home accidents, which we define as “any event occurring inside the home or in the immediate vicinity of the home that resulted in injury”,3 which was not done deliberately but happened by accident.4 In this paper, the terms ‘home accidents’ and ‘unintentional home accidents’ will be used interchangeably.

The Center for Disease Control Statistics in the US reported that every hour a child dies from injury and each year there are more than 50 000 children hospitalized due to accident-related injury.5 Furthermore, the Safety Report Card Summary for 18 countries in the European Union reported that each year over 10 000 children and adolescents less than 20 years old die as a result of unintentional accidents.6 That is almost one child dying every hour of every day.6 In addition, studies conducted in Oman, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Greece, and the UK, found that home accidental injuries are also high among children aged less than five years old.3,7–13

Many times, children survive accidents with physical or mental damage that curtails their activities in the long-term. The most commonly reported accidental injuries include head injury, open wounds, and poisoning. Even when the effects are not long-lasting, treating the injuries caused by accidents involve a huge financial outlay for health care organizations as well as for families.14

Even though there are studies addressing unintentional home accidents with children in Oman, there is no study to date focusing on the prevalence of home accidents in children in different age groups as well as the severity and outcome of the injuries. Therefore, this study aimed to identify the prevalence of children presented to the emergency department (ED) of a university-tertiary hospital in Oman due to unintentional home accidents over six months. The study presents the most common causes of home accidents among children in different age groups as well as the severity and outcome of injuries.

Methods

The study was conducted at Sultan Qaboos University Hospital (SQUH), which is a university-tertiary hospital located in a well-populated area (> 361 000 people) in Muscat, Oman. Furthermore, SQUH is a governmental hospital that provides health care services to the public regardless of their place of residence. The ED at SQUH receives all emergencies including children with injuries related to unintentional home accidents. Based on the extent and cause of the injury, children are either managed in the ED and discharged home or admitted to the hospital for further management or transferred to another specialized hospital.

We conducted a descriptive, retrospective study from January to June 2017. The Medical Research and Ethics Committee of the College of Medicine and Health Sciences at SQU approved the study. For the purpose of this study, a child was defined as “a human being below the age of 18 years old” according to child protection law in Oman.15 Therefore, this study included all children aged ≤ 18 years presented at SQUH ED due to unintentional home accidents. Children with motor vehicle accidents and children with home accidental injuries suspected to be related to domestic violence were excluded as they are not considered unintentional injuries. Furthermore, children with chronic medical conditions were also excluded.

A data collection checklist was developed by the research team based on the literature review using Access Microsoft Office. The checklist included questions regarding the demographic data, date of ED visit, and cause of the accident. Medical information was retrieved from the hospital electronic patient record by two ED registered nurses. Home accidents were divided based on ICD 10 types (International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 2015).

Since this study was mainly conducted in the ED, the severities of the injuries were classified according to Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale guideline,16 which is followed by the ED in SQUH [Table 1].

The checklist also included a section about the nature of unintentional home accidents related injuries and the treatment outcome. Furthermore, children admitted to the inpatient wards due to home accident-related injuries were followed-up and the research team recorded the length of hospitalization and treatment outcomes.

We used SPSS (IBM Corp. Released 2012. IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 21.0. Armonk, NY: IBM Corp.) to analyze the data (frequency and correlation). Epi Info (version 3) was used to test any correlations between two variables using the p-value. A p-value < 0.050 was considered the cut-off point value for significance. The associations between the study variables such as age and gender with the prevalence of accidents were done using the chi-square test.

Table 1: Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS) guideline.

CTAS level

Acuity/Severity

Color

Time

1

Resuscitation

Blue

Patients need to be seen by a physician immediately 98% of the time

2

Emergent

Red

Patients need to be seen by a physician within 15 minutes 95% of the time

3

Urgent

Yellow

Patients need to be seen by a physician within 30 minutes 90% of the time

4

Less urgent (semi-urgent)

Green

Patients need to be seen by a physician within 60 minutes 85% of the time

Results

A total of 1333 children visited the ED due to unintentional home accidents. This accounts for 7.7% of the total number of visits made by children to the ED. In general, there was a significant difference in home accidents visits made by male (n = 832; 62.4%) compared to female (n = 501; 37.6%) children, with a male to female ratio of 1.7:1 (p = 0.006) [Table 2].

Table 2: Prevalence of unintentional home accidents among children over six months.

Variables

n

Percentage, (%)

Unintentional home accidents (January-June 2017)

   

Children ≤ 18 years who visited the ED

17 336

100

Children visited ED with unintentional home accidents

1411

8.1

Children with unintentional home accidents included in the study

1333

7.7

Children with unintentional home accidents excluded from the study

78

5.5

Sex

   

Male

832

62.4

Females

501

37.6

Male to female ratio

1.7:1

p = 0.006

Distribution of unintentional home accidents per month (January-June 2017)

   

January

280

21.0

February

187

14.0

March

225

16.9

April

197

14.8

May

200

15.0

ED: emergency department.

We found ‘falls’ to be the most common cause of unintentional home accidents occurring in 716 (53.7%) children, followed by ‘struck by/against-animate/inanimate mechanical force’ in 201 (15.1%) children [Table 3]. Falls were the leading cause of unintentional home accidents among children for all age groups (p < 0.001). Toddlers (1–3 years old) most frequently presented to the ED due to home accident injuries with 370 (27.8%) followed by preschoolers (3–6 years old) with 331 (24.8%) children. Teenagers and infants least frequently presented to the ED due to home accidents with 249 (18.7) and 119 (8.9%) visits, respectively.

This study found no significant difference in the trend of the number of children presenting to the ED due to unintentional home accidents in the six-month study period. Yet, there was a slight increase in home accident-related injuries ED visits with 280 (21.0%) during January compared to other months [Table 2].

Falls were highly significant among boys in all age groups (p < 0.001) with the exception of infants (≤ 1 year old). Infant girls were more prone to falls than infant boys, but this finding was not statistically significant (p = 0.860).

The nature of home accidents related injuries were severe for some children including head injury (117 children; 8.8%), burn (35 children; 2.6%), fracture (75 children; 5.6%), poisoning (73 children; 5.5%), and suffocation/choking (10 children; 0.8%) [Table 4]. Furthermore, there was an ‘other’ injuries category to define severity with 91 (6.8%) children. These injuries include abscess, tooth loss, amputation, bleeding, and muscle dissection.

In terms of home accidents severities, 480 (36.0%) children had severe injuries and 692 (51.9%) children had semi-urgent (green category) injuries [Table 5]. One child required resuscitation but died as a result of falling from a height.

Children were managed differently [Table 5]. Some were treated in the ED and discharged, while others had to be admitted to the hospital or transferred to other hospitals. One child died, seven (0.5%) children refused the plan of treatment and went leave against medical advice (LAMA), and 44 (3.3%) left the ED before being seen by a physician. Nineteen (1.4%) children were referred to other tertiary hospitals when the modality of treatment was not available at SQUH, and 72 (5.4%) children were admitted to the hospital in the pediatric wards for further management.

The causes for admission to the hospital pediatric inpatient wards were mainly due to falls (23 children; 34.3%), foreign body in orifice/ingestion (14 children; 20.9%), and poisoning (13 children; 19.4%). The main reasons for admission due to unintentional home accident-related injuries were fracture (13 children; 19.4%), poisoning (13 children; 19.4%), superficial injuries (nine children; 13.4%), suffocation/choking (eight children; 11.9%), and head injury (eight children; 11.9%) [Table 6]. The length of stay varied according to the severity of the injury, ranging between one to 11 days with a mean of 2.9 days and a median of 2.0 days.

Table 3: Causes of unintentional home accidents according to age group.

Cause of unintentional home accident

Age groups, years

≤ 1

1–3

3–6

6–12

12–18

Total

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

Fall*

82 (11.5)**

190 (26.5)

186 (26.0)

140 (19.6)

118 (16.5)

716 (53.7)

Struck by/against-animate/inanimate mechanical force

9 (4.5)

43 (21.4)

54 (26.9)

53 (26.4)

42 (20.9)

201 (15.1)

Poisoning

8 (6.8)

55 (47.0)

19 (16.2)

15 (12.8)

20 (17.1)

117 (8.8)

Foreign body in orifice/ingestion

9 (8.2)

40 (36.4)

46 (41.8)

11 (10.0)

4 (3.6)

110 (8.3)

Sharps injury

2 (2.0)

26 (26.3)

21 (21.2)

28 (28.3)

22 (22.2)

99 (7.4)

Other causesѣ

1 (2.0)

0 (0.0)

1 (2.0)

8 (16.0)

40 (80.0)

50 (3.8)

Fire/flame

8 (22.2)

15 (41.7)

4 (11.1)

7 (19.4)

2 (5.6)

36 (2.7)

Drowning

0 (0.0)

1 (25.0)

0 (0.0)

2 (50.0)

1 (25.0)

4 (0.3)

** No statistical significance in fall between girls and boys in the infant age group (≤ 1 year), p = 0.860.
ѣIncluded chemical liquid splash on the face and sport/football injury.
*Falls were highly significant common among boys more than girls in all age groups, p < 0.001.

Table 4: Nature of unintentional home accidents related injuries and age groups.

Nature of injury

Age groups, years

≤ 1

1–3

3–6

6–12

12–18

Total,

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

Superficial injury

13 (3.7)

99 (28.1)

115 (32.7)

78 (22.2)

47 (13.4)

352 (26.4)

Contusion/hematoma/swelling

24 (9.6)

59 (23.5)

46 (18.3)

59 (23.5)

63(25.1)

251 (18.8)

Pain only

6 (3.6)

26 (15.5)

32 (19.0)

45 (26.8)

59 (35.1)

168 (12.6)

None

25 (17.1)

49 (33.6)

46 (31.5)

13 (8.9)

13 (8.9)

146 (11.0)

Head injury

23 (19.7)

37 (31.6)

29 (24.8)

19 (16.2)

9 (7.7)

117 (8.8)

Other injuries*

10 (11.0)

37 (40.7)

23 (25.3)

16 (17.6)

5 (5.5)

91 (6.8)

Fracture

2 (2.7)

8 (10.7)

17 (22.7)

19 (25.3)

29 (38.7)

75 (5.6)

Poisoning

6 (8.2)

33 (45.2)

13 (17.8)

8 (11.0)

13 (17.8)

73 (5.5)

Burn

8 (22.9)

15 42.9)

4 (11.4)

6 (17.1)

2 (5.7)

35 (2.6)

Strain/sprain

0 (0.0)

1 (6.7)

5 (33.3)

0 (0.0)

9 (60.0)

15 (1.1)

Suffocation/choking

2 (20.0)

6 (60.0)

1 (10.0)

1 (10.0)

0 (0.0)

10 (0.8)

*Other injuries included abscess, tooth loss, bleeding, amputation, and muscle dissection.

Table 5: The severity of home accidental injuries and management plan outcomes in the ED from January-June 2017.

Variables

n

%

The severity of home accidental injuries according to CTAS guideline

   

Resuscitation (blue)

1

0.1

Emergency (red)

134

10.1

Urgent (yellow)

480

36.0

Less urgent/semi urgent (green)

692

51.9

Non-urgent (white)

26

2.0

Management outcomes plan in ED

Discharge from ED

1080

81.0

Referred to other health institution

110

8.3

Referred to other tertiary hospital

19

1.4

Left before seen by Doctor

44

3.3

LAMA

7

0.5

Died

1

0.1

ED: emergency department, CTAS: Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale; LAMA: leave against medical advice.

Discussion

From the literature, it is apparent that unintentional home accidents among children are a major health problem. This study indicated that 1333 children (77 per 1000 children) visited the ED due to home accident injuries over six months. This is higher than the prevalence reported in previous studies and the reports of childhood injury surveillance in Oman (2014–2015), rural areas in Egypt (2012), and São Paulo in Brazil (2017).10,17,18 This high prevalence might be related to the study setting, which is a university-tertiary hospital located in a very populated area in the capital city. Furthermore, the hospital ED is the only public ED in the area. This might have resulted in more children visiting the ED compared with another study from Oman, which was conducted in a local health center.9 In addition, the prevalence of childhood home accidents related injury reported in surveillance in Oman 2014–2015 was a general figure where data from all health organizations in the country were reported collectively, which might have diluted the results.10

Table 6: Causes of unintentional home accident among admitted children in inpatient wards.

Variables

n

%

Causes of admission

   

Falls

23

34.3

Foreign body in orifice/ingestion

14

20.9

Poisoning

13

19.4

Animate/inanimate mechanical force

9

13.4

Sharps injury

5

7.5

Burn

1

1.5

Drowning

1

1.5

Other causes*

1

1.5

Nature of injury

   

Fracture

13

19.4

Poisoning

13

19.4

Superficial injury

9

13.4

Suffocation/choking

8

11.9

Head injury

8

11.9

None

8

11.9

Contusions/hematoma/swelling

3

4.5

Other injuries**

3

4.5

Burn

1

1.5

Pain only

1

1.5

Length of hospitalization, days

   

1

7

10.4

2

30

44.8

3–4

20

29.9

5–11

10

14.9

Admission treatment outcomes (discharge)

   

Home

63

94.0

LAMA

2

3.0

LAMA: leave against medical advice.
*Sport/football injury.
**Bleeding, abscess, muscle dissection, and amputation.

Our study findings showed that the common causes of home accidents among children are ‘falls’, ‘struck by/against-animate/inanimate mechanical force’ and ‘poisoning’, which is consistent with the childhood injury surveillance report in Oman 2014–2015.10 Furthermore, in other Arab countries like the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt, similar types of home accident-related injuries were reported, but with a different trend in terms of prevalence.11,12,17 These differences can be attributed to sociocultural differences and study settings. On the other hand, a study conducted in a rural area in Egypt showed that cut wounds were the highest accidents among the studied children.19 Furthermore, in a study conducted in the Arab Bedouin population in South Israel, burns were the most prevalent injuries.20 Although these studies were carried out in the Middle East where it can be assumed that there are similarities in terms of culture and facilities, the differences in results might indicate diversities rather than similarities in terms of culture and practices related to child-care, home environment, and the available child-care services. On the other hand, causes of home accidents are similar in reported statistics from countries like the US and UK. Yet, the prevalence of these causes among children is different from that reported here.8,21,22 These differences might again indicate the differences in home environment settings and culture.

Falls were the commonest cause of unintentional home accidents requiring medical care and the most common non-fatal injury requiring hospitalization among infants. These findings are consistent with the literature reported from Oman, UAE, UK, USA, and Australia.9,10,23–25 The reduced incidents of falls in infants might be due to the limited physical abilities of this age group.

In general, the findings of this study indicated that toddlers and preschoolers have an increased prevalence of home accidents compared to other age groups. This is consistent with other studies’ findings.7–10,12 The prevalence of home accidents increases during the first two years of life, reaching a peak at three to four years of age. This could be because children at this age are exploring the world.26 Additionally, children at this age are spending most of their time at home compared to school-age children. Furthermore, toddlers and preschoolers are fragile as per their physical development. In fact, children’s rapid increase in motor activities is not usually accompanied by a corresponding increase in cognitive abilities. This might place children of this age group at higher risk as they are not able to recognize dangers.21,26

Furthermore, this study indicated that the prevalence of poisoning was very high among toddlers. It is apparent that the risk of poisoning home accidents increased with age as the prevalence increased with children aged ≤ 1 year and then increased further with children in the toddler age group. Yet, the prevalence of poisoning reduced as children got older. On the other hand, unintentional home accidents related to struck by/against-animate/inanimate mechanical force increased with age from birth to 12 years of age. However, after 12 years of age, it started to decrease. Home accidents related to foreign bodies in orifice/ingestion were highest among toddlers and preschoolers. In general, the findings of this study indicated a correlation between age and home accidents as the prevalence of home accidents decreases with increasing age, which might be due to the development of children’s cognitive abilities with age.

Males had more home accidents. This was also reported in other studies.3,7–12 It has been reported that boys might be more prone to accidents as they are more physically active and adventurous compared to girls.8,19,20 In addition, there are also some other factors found to affect children in their home environment, including the physical environment in the house, the knowledge and behavior of the parents and other careers, overcrowding, and the availability of safety equipment in the home.20,27 Despite their importance, this study was unable to investigate the effect of these factors on unintentional home accidents due to its retrospective nature.

The findings of this study showed no significant difference in the prevalence of home accidents over the first six months of the year in 2017. Yet, there was a noted increase in home accidents in January. This can be because during January school children had a mid-term school holiday and may have spent most of their time at home. A report published by a secondary hospital in Oman located in a main city indicated that in 2007 and 2008 the number of unintentional home injuries increased during school summer holiday (July to September).27 Warmer months, from April to September, were reported to have an increased number of home accidents in the US.28 This indicate that home related accidents might increase during the months that children spend more time at home.

Unintentional home accidents have contributed from mild to severe injuries and a lot of deaths during hospital admission and long-term harm.13 Four children were admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit immediately as a result of suffocation/choking from foreign body ingestion and drowning, while one child was transferred directly to a burn unit in another specialized hospital. The same has been reported by the Public Health in England (2014) as choking and drowning were the highest serious unintentional home accidents, while burns require long-term hospitalization and cause serious disabilities but rarely death.8 On the other hand, poisoning was found to cause the shortest hospital stay with a maximum of three days. This has also been reported earlier in the UK.8,28

The findings of this study on the increased number of injuries related to home accidents among children might indicate low social attention to preventive safety measures in the home environment.14 Furthermore, this might indicate a lack of an effective plan for preventing home accidents to reduce the severity of injuries. Managing and treating unintentional home accident-related injuries is costly to health care organizations.

This study could not find any significant correlation between unintentional home accidents and specific time periods as it was only conducted for six months. This study was conducted in one hospital for six months and, therefore, the findings might not be generalized to the whole population and further studies are required. Due to the retrospective nature of the study, it was difficult to account for different factors that might have affected the prevalence of unintentional home accidents (e.g., parents’ education, economic level, and home environment).

Background knowledge for ED nurses on home accidents among children may help them in predicting the common types of injuries, the severity of the injuries, and subsequently be prepared to provide the required care. The findings of this study can be utilized in developing strategies to deal with home accident-related injuries to reduce their impact on children and families’ lives. Furthermore, the study findings provide valuable information for policymakers that can be utilized to implement strategies to improve home environment safety.

Conclusion

Home accidents are an important cause of morbidity and mortality in children worldwide. Furthermore, home accidents are expansive for health care. This study has shown that there is a high hospital prevalence of unintentional home accidents with 77 in 1000 children presenting to the ED during a six-month period. The most common type of unintentional home accidents in children was fall with toddlers being the highest vulnerable age group. The results of this study urges children’s advocates like, educational groups, government organizations, policymakers, guardians, and parents to develop mechanisms and implement measures that are made mandatory to reduce and prevent home accidents among children. Furthermore, this study adds vital information to the scientific body of knowledge that can be utilized to improve patient care from triaging by anticipating the risk of an unintentional home accident-related injury.

Disclosure

The authors declared no conflict of interest. No funding was received for this study.

references

  1. 1. Child and youth injury prevention: A public health approach, 1997 [cited 2019 March]. Available from: https://www.cps.ca/en/documents/position/child-and-youth-injury-prevention.
  2. 2. Hamzaoglu O, Ozkan O, Janson S. Incidence and causes of home accidents at Ankara Cigiltepe apartments in Turkey. Accid Anal Prev 2002 Jan;34(1):123-128.
  3. 3. Tsoumakas K, Dousis E, Mavridi F, Gremou A, Matziou V. Parent’s adherence to children’s home-accident preventive measures. Int Nurs Rev 2009 Sep;56(3):369-374.
  4. 4. Definition of unintentional. Collins English Dictionary. [cited 2018 July 10]. Available from: https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/unintentional.
  5. 5. Unintentional Drowning. Get the Facts. 2015 [cited 2017 December]. Available from: http://www.cdc.gov/homeandrecreationalsafety/water-safety/waterinjuries-factsheet.html.
  6. 6. MacKay M, Vincenten J, Brussoni M, Towner L. Child safety good practice guide: good investments in unintentional child injury prevention and safety promotion. European Child Safety Alliance, Amsterdam. 2007 [cited 2016 December]. Available from: http://www.childsafetyeurope.org/publications/goodpracticeguide/info/good-practice-guide.pdf.
  7. 7. Grivna M, Barss P, Stanculescu C, Eid HO, Abu-Zidan FM. Child and youth traffic-related injuries: use of a trauma registry to identify priorities for prevention in the United Arab Emirates. Traffic Inj Prev 2013;14(3):274-282.
  8. 8. Office for National Statistics. Public health England publication 2014. Reducing unintentional injuries in and around the home among children under five years. (Page 6). Crown copyright reserved. [cited 2016 April]. Available from: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/reducing-unintentional-injuries-among-children-and-young-people.
  9. 9. Al-Balushi H, Al-Kalbani A, Al-Khwaldi T, Al-Suqri S, Al-Maniri A, Alazri M, et al. Injuries presented at a primary care setting in oman. Oman Med J 2012 Nov;27(6):486-490.
  10. 10. Mehmood A, Agrawal P, Allen KA, Al-Kashmiri A, Al-Busaidi A, Hyder AA. Childhood injuries in Oman: retrospective review of multicentre trauma registry data. BMJ Paediatrics open 2018;2:e000310.
  11. 11. Gad A, AL-Eid R, Al-Ansary S, bin Saeed A, Kabbash A. Pattern of injuries among children and adolescents in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: a household survey. J Trop Pediatr 2011 Jun;57(3):179-184.
  12. 12. AL Rumhi A. AL Awaisi H. Jeyaseeln L. Home accidents among children in Oman. Eur J Pedia trr 2016;175:1393-1880 [cited 2017 July 10]. Available from: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00431-016-2785-8.
  13. 13. Ministry of Health. Oman, Annual Health Report 2012. [cited 2017 January]. Available from: https://www.moh.gov.om/en/web/statistics/annual-reports.
  14. 14. World Health Organization and UNICEF. World report on child injury prevention. Geneva: WHO [cited 2012 April]. Available from: http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2008/9789241563574_eng.pdf.
  15. 15. Child protection Laws. The Official Oman eGovernment Services Portal. [cited 2017 January]. Available from: http://www.oman.om/wps/portal/index/cr/childcare/childprotectionlaws.
  16. 16. The Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS). [cited 2016 December]. Available from: http://ctas-phctas.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/participant_manual_v2.5b_november_2013_0.pdf.
  17. 17. Hesham E, Fatma H, Suzan G. Cross-sectional study of injuries among school children in Ismailia Governorate, Egypt. Inj Prev 2012;18(Suppl 1):A117.
  18. 18. Abib SC, Françóia AM, Waksman R, Dolci MI, Guimarães HP, Moreira F, et al. Unintentional pediatric injuries in São Paulo. How often is it severe? Acta Cir Bras 2017 Jul;32(7):587-598.
  19. 19. Eldosoky RS. Home-related injuries among children: knowledge, attitudes and practice about first aid among rural mothers. East Mediterr Health J 2012 Oct;18(10):1021-1027.
  20. 20. Broides A, Assaf M. Home accidents in Arab Bedouin children in southern Israel. J Child Health Care 2003 Sep;7(3):207-214.
  21. 21. Harris VA, Rochette LM, Smith GA. Pediatric injuries attributable to falls from windows in the United States in 1990-2008. Pediatrics 2011 Sep;128(3):455-462.
  22. 22. Runyan CW, Casteel C, Perkis D, Black C, Marshall SW, Johnson RM, et al. Unintentional injuries in the home in the United States Part I: mortality. Am J Prev Med 2005 Jan;28(1):73-79.
  23. 23. Bener A, Al-Salman KM, Pugh RN. Injury mortality and morbidity among children in the United Arab Emirates. Eur J Epidemiol 1998 Feb;14(2):175-178.
  24. 24. Powell EC, Tanz RR. Adjusting our view of injury risk: the burden of nonfatal injuries in infancy. Pediatrics 2002 Oct;110(4):792-796.
  25. 25. Scott D, Higgins D, Franklin R. The role of supervisory neglect in childhood injury. Australian Institute of Family Studies 2012 Sep;8 [cited 2013 Jan]. Available from: https://aifs.gov.au/cfca/publications/role-supervisory-neglect-childhood-injury.
  26. 26. Grossman DC, Rivara FP. Injury control in childhood. Pediatr Clin North Am 1992 Jun;39(3):471-485.
  27. 27. Dhar D, Varghese T. Audit of inpatient management and outcome of limb fractures in children. Oman Med J 2011 Mar;26(2):131-135.
  28. 28. Hippisley-Cox J, Groom L, Kendrick D, Coupland C, Webber E, Savelyich B. Cross sectional survey of socioeconomic variations in severity and mechanism of childhood injuries in Trent 1992-7. BMJ 2002 May;324(7346):1132-1134.