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Original papers

Is drowning a serious public health problem in Guangdong Province, People's Republic of China? – results from a retrospective population-based survey, 2004–2005

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Pages 103-110 | Received 08 May 2009, Accepted 09 Oct 2009, Published online: 07 Dec 2009
 

Abstract

The aim of this study is to describe the characteristics of fatal drowning in Guangdong Province during the period 2004–2005. Twelve areas were randomly chosen by stratified cluster sampling, and a retrospective cross-sectional survey was conducted in 2006 to collect death cases during the 2004–2005 period. Causes of death relating to drowning were coded according to International Classification of Diseases, the tenth version. During 2004–2005, 849 unintentional drowning deaths occurred, representing a drowning rate of 5.6/100,000 per year. The rate was higher in rural areas (6.4/100,000) than in city (3.7/100,000), and the rate ratio of male to female was 1.5. The elderly aged 80 years and over and children aged 5–9 years had higher mortalities among all age groups, representing rates of 28.8 and 11.0 per 100,000 person years. For children aged 5–9 years, deaths from drowning accounted for the highest proportion (62.5%) of all injury deaths. The most common site of drowning was natural bodies of water (60.8%), and summer was the highest risk season for drowning. The results suggest drowning is an important public health problem, and it primarily threatens children in Guangdong province. Drowning intervention programs should be a health priority in Guangdong province.

Acknowledgements

The project was conducted under the support of Taishan, Nanxiong, Shunde, Doumen, Wenyuan, Wuhua, Yingde, Sihui, Yuexiu, Zhongshan, Yunfu, Shanwei CDC. Without the assistance and contribution of these CDCs and their staff, the study would not have been possible. The authors acknowledge their field work and contribution. The authors also thank Professor Codia Chu and Dr. Shannon Rutherford at the International Center for Development, Environment and Population Health, Griffith University in Australia, for their help in paper writing. The project was partly financed by the Ministry of Health of China.

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