Browsing by Author "Friedman, Kaitlyn"
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Item Open Access Alcohol Use and Violence-Related Injury in Moshi, Tanzania: A Mixed Methods Study(2019) Friedman, KaitlynBackground: Harmful alcohol use and violence are both major contributors to global mortality and morbidity rates, despite being both predictable and preventable. This study seeks to quantitatively determine the scope of violence-related injury and Alcohol Use Disorders in a referral hospital in Moshi, and qualitatively determine 1) how violence-related injury patients perceive alcohol use influences the occurrence of violence and 2) how experiencing a violence-related injury influences patients’ subsequent alcohol use behavior.
Methods: This study was conducted at Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center (KCMC). Survey data was obtained from a trauma registry including all injury patients ≥ 18 years admitted to the emergency room. Interview participants were included if they reported their injury was due to violence, tested positive for alcohol (by breathalyzer) upon admittance, medically stable, able to communicate and provide informed consent in Swahili or English, and clinically sober at the time of enrollment.
Results: From the 500 injury patients enrolled in the trauma registry from April 17, 2018 to January 12, 2019, 84 (16.8%) reported that their injury was due to violence. Patients with violent injuries were 2.21 times more likely to have a positive alcohol status compared to non-violent injuries (95% CI 1.36, 3.60, p<0.01). Among violent injuries, those with a positive alcohol status were 6.26 times more likely to have an Alcohol Use Disorder compared to those with a negative alcohol status (95% CI 2.13, 18.39, p<0.001). Interview respondents reported a perception that violent injuries were worse from other injuries, that the perpetrator was also under the influence of alcohol, that alcohol contributes to violence, and a desire to change alcohol use behavior following their injury.
Conclusion: Alcohol use and violence-related injury pose a significant threat to health and well-being globally. In Moshi, Tanzania, both issues are prevalent and contribute to a sufficient disease burden. This study has added to the data on alcohol-attributable harm, contributing to expanding information available on this issue from LMICs. To adequately reduce violence-related injuries in this setting, it is necessary to address harmful alcohol use as well.
Item Open Access Prevention of childhood unintentional injuries in low- and middle-income countries: A systematic review.(PloS one, 2020-01) Tupetz, Anna; Friedman, Kaitlyn; Zhao, Duan; Liao, Huipeng; Isenburg, Megan Von; Keating, Elizabeth M; Vissoci, Joao Ricardo Nickenig; Staton, Catherine A; Staton, Catherine AInjuries are a leading cause of death and disability among children. Numerous injury prevention strategies have been successful in high-income countries, but the majority of unintentional injuries happen to children living in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). This project aims to delineate the childhood injury prevention initiatives in LMICs. For inclusion, peer-reviewed articles needed to address unintentional injury, include children <18, assess a prevention-related intervention, contain a control group, and be published after 1988. Two pairs of reviewers evaluated articles independently to determine study eligibility. 74 articles were included. 30 studies addressed road traffic injuries, 11 drowning, 8 burns, 3 falls, 8 poisonings, and 21 an unspecified injury type. The findings show positive effects on injury outcome measures following educational interventions, the need for longer follow-up periods after the intervention, the need for effectiveness trials for behavior change, and the need for an increase in injury prevention services in LMICs. This is the first systematic review to summarize the prevention initiatives for all types of childhood unintentional injuries in LMICs. Increased attention and funding are required to go beyond educational initiatives with self-reported measures and little follow-up time to robust interventions that will reduce the global burden of unintentional injuries among children.