1. The relationship between psychosocial circumstances and injuries in adolescents: An analysis of 87,269 individuals from 26 countries using the Global School-based Student Health Survey
- Author
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Yount, Kathryn Mary, Ismail, S, Odland, ML, Malik, A, Weldegiorgis, M ; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0080-6990, Newbigging, K, Peden, M ; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0872-9851, Woodward, M ; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9800-5296, Davies, J, Yount, Kathryn Mary, Ismail, S, Odland, ML, Malik, A, Weldegiorgis, M ; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0080-6990, Newbigging, K, Peden, M ; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0872-9851, Woodward, M ; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9800-5296, and Davies, J
- Abstract
Background Over a million adolescents die globally each year from preventable or treatable causes, with injuries (intentional and unintentional) being the leading cause of these deaths. To inform strategies to prevent these injuries, we aimed to assess psychosocial factors associated with serious injury occurrence, type, and mechanism in adolescents. Methods and findings We conducted a secondary analysis of cross-sectional survey data collected from the Global School-based Student Health Survey between 2009 and 2015. We used logistic regression to estimate associations between prevalence of serious injuries, injury type (effects of injury), and injury mechanism (cause of injury) and psychosocial factors (factors that relate to individuals socially, or their thoughts or behaviour, or the interrelation between these variables). Psychosocial factors were categorised, based on review of the literature, author knowledge, and discussion amongst authors. The categories were markers of risky behaviour (smoking, alcohol use, drug use, and physical activity), contextual factors (hunger, bullying, and loneliness), protective factors (number of friends and having a supportive family), and markers of poor mental health (planned or attempted suicide and being too worried to sleep). Models were adjusted for country factors (geographical area and income status, both using World Bank classification), demographic factors (age and sex), and factors to explain the survey design. A total of 87,269 adolescents living in 26 countries were included. The weighted majority were 14–15 years old (45.88%), male (50.70%), from a lower-middle-income country (81.93%), and from East Asia and the Pacific (66.83%). The weighted prevalence of a serious injury in the last 12 months was 36.33%, with the rate being higher in low-income countries compared to other countries (48.74% versus 36.14%) and amongst males compared to females (42.62% versus 29.87%). Psychosocial factors most strongly associated wi
- Published
- 2021