Home accidents in the province of Trento. Ten years of observations regarding admissions to the emergency and first aid department.

2021 
Background Home accidents, or domestic accidents, are accidents that occur inside a home or the adjacent areas (stairways, courtyards, gardens, attics, cellars, garages, etc.). In Italy, they are monitored through a number of surveillance systems including the PASSI system and the ISTAT (Italian Institute of Statistics) Multipurpose Survey on Households. Only the SINIACA system (Italian National Information Service on Domestic Accidents), managed by the Istituto Superiore di Sanita (National Institute for Health), provides health-related information regarding such events and their circumstances and consequences, based primarily on Accident & Emergency Departments' data. Study design This is an observational study on the domestic accidents trends in the province of Trento, using data on Accident & Emergency Departments admissions, between 2009 and 2018, combined with mortality and hospital discharge data. Methods The authors extrapolated records regarding admissions for domestic accidents from the digital annual Accident & Emergency admissions archive. For the 2009-2018 period, they analysed: the trend over time, both overall and classified according to gender and age group; and the inflow rate/10,000 inhabitants, broken down according to gender, nationality (Italians and foreign nationals) and age group. The coverage of the additional SINIACA variables regarding the accident dynamic, contingent activity and place of the accident were also analysed. With regard to the case load for 2018, the authors analysed the site and type of the injuries, the level of severity, outcome and the services provided, comparing the 0-14 years and >65 years age groups. Trend significance was analysed using the Cochran-Armitage test for trend and the significance of the differences between the proportions was analysed using the Chi-squared test. We have also calculated the costs of the services provided, overall and by age group. Results During the study period, a total of 99,386 AE household chores, activities of daily living and DIY are the three most commonly observed activities. Home accidents most commonly occur in the areas adjacent to the home and the kitchen. In over 2/3 of cases, the injuries sustained were to the limbs and the head/face. Head/face injuries prevail in the youngest age group. Wounds, burns and head injuries are the most common types of injury sustained by children in the 0-14 years age group, whereas fractures and dislocations are typical of the older age groups. Diagnostic and care resource consumption is far higher amongst the elderly, which absorb 61% of the total costs of the cases treated in the year 2018. Conclusion Accident & Emergency facilities provide a privileged observatory for the monitoring of domestic accidents in the population. By comparing our data with the ISTAT data, it can be estimated that 1 in 2 home accidents in the population resulted in an AE however, there are differences between the two in terms of type of injury, level of severity and outcome. It is essential for A&E admission data to be fully digitalised, and facility and staff sensitisation is also important in order to guarantee the availability of good-quality data. The completeness of A&E data and the possibility of obtaining case stratification based on social and demographic characteristics could make it possible, through a virtuous integration of services, to use these data for the implementation of prevention initiatives. These, if carried out effectively, could also contribute to contain healthcare costs.
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