Abstract

BackgroundInjuries are becoming an increasingly important public health challenge globally, and are responsible for 9% of deaths. Beyond their impact on health and well-being, fatal and non-fatal injuries also affect social and economic development for individuals concerned. Kenya has limited data on the magnitude and factors associated with injuries. This study sought to determine the magnitude and risk factors for injuries in Kenya and to identify where the largest burden lies.MethodsA national population-based household survey was conducted from April–June 2015 among adults age 18–69 years. A three-stage cluster sample design was used to select clusters, households and eligible individuals based on WHO guidelines. We estimated the prevalence of injuries, identified factors associated with injuries and the use of protective devices/practices among road users. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify potential factors associated with injuries.ResultsA total of 4484 adults were included in the study. Approximately 15% had injuries from the past 12 months, 60.3% were males. Four percent of the respondents had been injured in a road traffic crash, 10.9% had experienced unintentional injuries other than road traffic injuries while 3.7% had been injured in violent incidents. Among drivers and passengers 12.5% reported always using a seatbelt and 8.1% of the drivers reported driving while drunk. The leading causes of injuries other than road traffic crashes were falls (47.6%) and cuts (34.0%). Males (p = 0.001), age 18–29 (p < 0.05) and smokers (p = 0.001) were significantly more likely to be injured in a road traffic crash. A higher social economic status (p = 0.001) was protective against other unintentional injuries while students had higher odds for such types of injuries. Heavy episodic drinking (p = 0.001) and smoking (p < 0.05) were associated with increased likelihood of occurrence of a violent injury.ConclusionsOur study found that male, heavy episodic drinkers, current smokers and students were associated with various injury types. Our study findings highlight the need to scale up interventions for injury prevention for specific injury mechanisms and target groups. There is need for sustained road safety mass media campaigns and strengthened enforcement on helmet wearing, seatbelt use and drink driving.

Highlights

  • Injuries are becoming an increasingly important public health challenge globally, and are responsible for 9% of deaths

  • There was an almost equal proportion of women and men who participated in the study; more men (60.3%) than women (39.4%) reported having been injured (p = 0.000)

  • Respondents with no formal education had the lowest proportion of injuries (8.2%)

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Summary

Introduction

Injuries are becoming an increasingly important public health challenge globally, and are responsible for 9% of deaths. Injuries are becoming an increasingly important public health challenge globally, responsible for 9% of deaths [1]. Injuries were intentionally included after realizing the significant burden they produce in the region and the slow progress experienced in reducing this burden despite the availability of proven evidence-based strategies [4, 5]. This is a commendable step towards prioritizing efforts towards injury prevention and control in the African region which bears the largest brunt of deaths due to injuries [1]. Goal three focuses on NCDs, with a specific target pertaining to injury: to halve the number of deaths and injuries due to road traffic accidents

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