Child behavior and accidental injury in 11,966 preschool children
P. E. Bijur, S. Stewart-Brown and N. Butler
Social and behavioral characteristics of 11,966 British children, aged 5
years, and mothers' reports of accidental injuries between birth and age 5
years were analyzed. Aggressive behavior was associated with all accidental
injuries after controlling psychosocial variables including social class;
crowding; mother's psychological distress, age, and marital status; and
child's sex. Overactivity was associated only with injuries not resulting
in hospitalization after control of the covariates. The relative risk of
injuries resulting in hospitalization was 1.9 among children with both high
activity and high aggression scores compared with children with low scores
on both behavioral scales. The findings support the inference that
aggression and overactivity are independently associated with accidents.
The associations between child behavior and injuries were stronger than the
associations between injuries and the social factors including social class
and crowding. This finding suggests that interventions aimed at high-risk
groups may be effective supplements to environmental interventions.
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