The objective was to examine the relationship between injury rates and socioeconomic factors for children in Hamilton County,
Ohio, using small-area analysis. The subjects were county residents less than 15 years old who were hospitalized or died of
injuries between January 1, 1993, and December 31, 1995; they were identified through a population-based trauma registry.
The census tract was the unit of analysis; the rate of injury per 100,000 population was the dependent variable. Risk factors
included median income, level of education, percentage below the poverty level, percentage unemployment, percentage non-Caucasian,
and percentage families headed by females. There were 2,437 children meeting the case definition; injuries per census tract
ranged from 0 to 2,020.2 per 100,000 per year. Census tracts with higher injury rates had lower median incomes, more people
with less than a high school education, more unemployment, more families headed by females, more people living below the poverty
level, and more non-Cancasians han those with lower rates. In a regression model, percentage of people living below poverty
level, percentage of those who did not graduate from high school, and percentage unemployment were significant risk factors
for injuries, P<.001. Since small-area analysis examines associations on an ecological level rather than an individual level, these studies
should always be interpreted with caution because an association found at the level of the census tract may not apply at the
individual level. Inverventions to reduce injuries should target socioeconomically disadvantaged children living below the
poverty level and those in areas with fewer high school graduates and more unemployment.
Keywords Epidemiology - Injury - Injury Surveillance - Small-Area Analysis - Socioeconomic Factors