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Erschienen in: Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology 3/2013

01.03.2013 | Trauma

Eye injuries in the elderly from consumer products in the United States: 2001–2007

verfasst von: Allison J. Chen, Julia G. Kim, James G. Linakis, Michael J. Mello, Paul B. Greenberg

Erschienen in: Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology | Ausgabe 3/2013

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Abstract

Purpose

To quantify and characterize eye injuries related to consumer products in elderly patients (≥65) treated in United States (US) hospital emergency departments (EDs) in 2001–2007.

Design

Retrospective study.

Participants

The study comprised 1,455 patient cases.

Methods

Descriptive analysis of consumer-product (CP)-related eye injury data derived from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System, a probability sample of 100 hospitals nationwide with 24-hour EDs. Narrative data was used to assign each case with the CP causing the eye injury, correcting for cases with misclassified CP codes. The proportions of eye injury visits were calculated by age, gender, diagnosis, disposition, locale of incident, and CP categories. The patient population included ocular injuries of all severity levels. We examined data for all non-fatal eye injuries in elderly patients (≥65) treated in US EDs in 2001–2007.

Main outcome measures

Age, gender, diagnosis, case disposition, locale of incident, CP causing the injury.

Results

There were an estimated 67,864 visits to United States EDs by patients >65 years for CP-related eye injuries during the study period, of which 64 % (43,105; 95 % confidence interval [CI], 40,739–45,472) were by males; 70 % (CI, 44,837–49,496) occurred at home. Chemicals (22 %; 15,236; CI, 13,482–16,989), followed by cutting tools/construction (21 %; 14,524; CI, 12,777–16,272), furniture (15 %; 10,145; CI, 8,724–11,566), and gardening (14 %; 9,467; CI, 8,021–10,912) were the most common causes of eye injury. The CP categories with the greatest proportion of preventable injuries were cutting tools/construction (90 %), gardening (88 %), and household tools (71 %). Contusions or abrasions (39 %; 26,968; CI, 24,850–29,086) were the most common diagnoses.

Conclusions

This study suggests that most CP-related elderly eye injuries in the U.S. occur at home and in men. Chemicals are the most common cause of injury. Further research is needed to determine effective strategies to minimize CP-related eye injuries in the elderly.
Literatur
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Metadaten
Titel
Eye injuries in the elderly from consumer products in the United States: 2001–2007
verfasst von
Allison J. Chen
Julia G. Kim
James G. Linakis
Michael J. Mello
Paul B. Greenberg
Publikationsdatum
01.03.2013
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology / Ausgabe 3/2013
Print ISSN: 0721-832X
Elektronische ISSN: 1435-702X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00417-012-2004-x

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