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Journal of Aging and Health
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The Evolution of Unintentional Injury Mortality Among Elderly in Europe

Eleni Th. Petridou, MD, MPH

Athens University Medical School, Greece

Stavroula K. Dikalioti, MD

Athens University Medical School, Greece

Nick Dessypris, MSc

Athens University Medical School, Greece

Ilias Skalkidis, PhD

Athens University Medical School, Greece

Fabio Barbone, MD

University of Udine, Udine, Italy

Patricia Fitzpatrick, MD

University College of Dublin

Antero Heloma, MD, PhD

Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, Helsinki, Finland

Maria Segui-Gomez, MD, ScD

University of Navarra, Spain

Dinesh Sethi, MD, MSc

WHO Regional Office for Europe, Rome, Italy

Objectives: To compare cause-specific unintentional injury mortality trends among elderly (65+) in the European Union over a 10-year period. Method: Overall and cause-specific data for 23 out of the 29 EU and European Free Trade Association countries with population ≥ 1,000,000 were retrieved from the World Health Organization (WHO), and age-standardized mortality rates for the first and last 3 available years of the study period were calculated. Proportional mortality changes were estimated through linear regression. Results: Circa 1993, country-specific rates varied widely (>fourfold), but this gap is closing and a statistically significant downward trend in overall mortality is noted circa 2002, in about half of the countries. Rates from falls were reduced by 4.3%, from motor vehicle traffic by 3.1%, and from smoke, fire, and flames by 3.1%. Discussion: A large proportion of EU countries enjoys steady declining trends by major unintentional injury mortality category. Success factors and barriers underlying these benchmarking patterns should be further explored to accelerate the process of injury reduction.

Key Words: cause-specific mortality • elderly • Europe • trend • unintentional injuries

Journal of Aging and Health, Vol. 20, No. 2, 159-182 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0898264307310467


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