Child injury surveillance capabilities in NSW: informing policy and practice

Injury is one of the most common reasons why a child is hospitalised. Information gained from injury surveillance activities provides an estimate of the injury burden, describes injury event circumstances, can be used to monitor injury trends over time, and is used to design and evaluate injury prev...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rebecca Mitchell, Luke Testa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sax Institute 2017-10-01
Series:Public Health Research & Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.phrp.com.au/issues/october-2017-volume-27-issue-4/child-injury-surveillance-capabilities-in-nsw-informing-policy-and-practice/
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spelling doaj-1afcda8c2d04430c8a43059a1db58c7c2020-11-24T23:43:27ZengSax InstitutePublic Health Research & Practice2204-20912017-10-0127410.17061/phrp2741734 Child injury surveillance capabilities in NSW: informing policy and practiceRebecca Mitchell0Luke Testa1 Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSWAustralian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSWInjury is one of the most common reasons why a child is hospitalised. Information gained from injury surveillance activities provides an estimate of the injury burden, describes injury event circumstances, can be used to monitor injury trends over time, and is used to design and evaluate injury prevention activities. This perspective article provides an overview of child injury surveillance capabilities within New South Wales (NSW), Australia, following a stocktake of population-based injury-related data collections using the Evaluation Framework for Injury Surveillance Systems. Information about childhood injury in NSW is obtained from multiple administrative data collections that were not specifically designed to conduct injury surveillance. Obtaining good information for child injury surveillance in NSW will involve better coordination of information from agencies that record information about childhood injury. Regular reporting about childhood injury to provide a comprehensive profile of injuries of children and young people in the state should be considered, along with the provision and/or linkage of child injury information from multiple data collections. This could support the development of a suite of injury performance indicators to monitor childhood injury reduction strategies across NSW.http://www.phrp.com.au/issues/october-2017-volume-27-issue-4/child-injury-surveillance-capabilities-in-nsw-informing-policy-and-practice/InjuryMonitoringChild health
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebecca Mitchell
Luke Testa
spellingShingle Rebecca Mitchell
Luke Testa
Child injury surveillance capabilities in NSW: informing policy and practice
Public Health Research & Practice
Injury
Monitoring
Child health
author_facet Rebecca Mitchell
Luke Testa
author_sort Rebecca Mitchell
title Child injury surveillance capabilities in NSW: informing policy and practice
title_short Child injury surveillance capabilities in NSW: informing policy and practice
title_full Child injury surveillance capabilities in NSW: informing policy and practice
title_fullStr Child injury surveillance capabilities in NSW: informing policy and practice
title_full_unstemmed Child injury surveillance capabilities in NSW: informing policy and practice
title_sort child injury surveillance capabilities in nsw: informing policy and practice
publisher Sax Institute
series Public Health Research & Practice
issn 2204-2091
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Injury is one of the most common reasons why a child is hospitalised. Information gained from injury surveillance activities provides an estimate of the injury burden, describes injury event circumstances, can be used to monitor injury trends over time, and is used to design and evaluate injury prevention activities. This perspective article provides an overview of child injury surveillance capabilities within New South Wales (NSW), Australia, following a stocktake of population-based injury-related data collections using the Evaluation Framework for Injury Surveillance Systems. Information about childhood injury in NSW is obtained from multiple administrative data collections that were not specifically designed to conduct injury surveillance. Obtaining good information for child injury surveillance in NSW will involve better coordination of information from agencies that record information about childhood injury. Regular reporting about childhood injury to provide a comprehensive profile of injuries of children and young people in the state should be considered, along with the provision and/or linkage of child injury information from multiple data collections. This could support the development of a suite of injury performance indicators to monitor childhood injury reduction strategies across NSW.
topic Injury
Monitoring
Child health
url http://www.phrp.com.au/issues/october-2017-volume-27-issue-4/child-injury-surveillance-capabilities-in-nsw-informing-policy-and-practice/
work_keys_str_mv AT rebeccamitchell childinjurysurveillancecapabilitiesinnswinformingpolicyandpractice
AT luketesta childinjurysurveillancecapabilitiesinnswinformingpolicyandpractice
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