Unintentional injuries and socio-psychological correlates among school-going adolescents in four ASEAN countries

© 2019 Pengpid and Peltzer. Objectives: The study aimed to report the prevalence and socio-psychological correlates of non-fatal injury among school adolescents in four ASEAN countries. Materials and methods: Cross-sectional research data from the 2015 “Global School-based Health Survey (GSHS)” incl...

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Main Authors: Supa Pengpid, Karl Peltzer
Other Authors: North-West University
Format: Article
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/52081
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spelling th-mahidol.520812020-01-27T17:19:59Z Unintentional injuries and socio-psychological correlates among school-going adolescents in four ASEAN countries Supa Pengpid Karl Peltzer North-West University Mahidol University Medicine © 2019 Pengpid and Peltzer. Objectives: The study aimed to report the prevalence and socio-psychological correlates of non-fatal injury among school adolescents in four ASEAN countries. Materials and methods: Cross-sectional research data from the 2015 “Global School-based Health Survey (GSHS)” included 29,480 school adolescents (mean age 14.5 years, standard deviation=1.6) that were representative of all students in secondary school. Results: The proportion of participants with one or multiple serious past-year injuries was 36.9% (21.4% once and 15.4% multiple times). The most frequent cause of the reported injury was “I fell” (10.2%) and motor vehicle (5.8%) and the most common form of injury was “a broken bone or dislocated joint” (8.1%) and “cut, puncture or stab wound” (3.4%). In adjusted multinomial logistic regression analysis, male sex, experiencing hunger, substance use (alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, amphetamine and soft drinks), school truancy, participating in physical education classes and psychological distress were associated with one and/or multiple injuries. Parental or guardian support decreased the odds of one annual injury. Compared to students from Indonesia, students from Laos had a lower odd for injury and students from the Philippines and Thailand had higher odds for injury. Conclusion: Several variables, such as male sex, food insecurity, substance use, truancy, physical education and psychological distress, were identified that could be targeted in injury prevention programs in this school population. 2020-01-27T10:19:59Z 2020-01-27T10:19:59Z 2019-01-01 Article International Journal of General Medicine. Vol.12, (2019), 263-271 10.2147/IJGM.S212350 11787074 2-s2.0-85071588523 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/52081 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85071588523&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Supa Pengpid
Karl Peltzer
Unintentional injuries and socio-psychological correlates among school-going adolescents in four ASEAN countries
description © 2019 Pengpid and Peltzer. Objectives: The study aimed to report the prevalence and socio-psychological correlates of non-fatal injury among school adolescents in four ASEAN countries. Materials and methods: Cross-sectional research data from the 2015 “Global School-based Health Survey (GSHS)” included 29,480 school adolescents (mean age 14.5 years, standard deviation=1.6) that were representative of all students in secondary school. Results: The proportion of participants with one or multiple serious past-year injuries was 36.9% (21.4% once and 15.4% multiple times). The most frequent cause of the reported injury was “I fell” (10.2%) and motor vehicle (5.8%) and the most common form of injury was “a broken bone or dislocated joint” (8.1%) and “cut, puncture or stab wound” (3.4%). In adjusted multinomial logistic regression analysis, male sex, experiencing hunger, substance use (alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, amphetamine and soft drinks), school truancy, participating in physical education classes and psychological distress were associated with one and/or multiple injuries. Parental or guardian support decreased the odds of one annual injury. Compared to students from Indonesia, students from Laos had a lower odd for injury and students from the Philippines and Thailand had higher odds for injury. Conclusion: Several variables, such as male sex, food insecurity, substance use, truancy, physical education and psychological distress, were identified that could be targeted in injury prevention programs in this school population.
author2 North-West University
author_facet North-West University
Supa Pengpid
Karl Peltzer
format Article
author Supa Pengpid
Karl Peltzer
author_sort Supa Pengpid
title Unintentional injuries and socio-psychological correlates among school-going adolescents in four ASEAN countries
title_short Unintentional injuries and socio-psychological correlates among school-going adolescents in four ASEAN countries
title_full Unintentional injuries and socio-psychological correlates among school-going adolescents in four ASEAN countries
title_fullStr Unintentional injuries and socio-psychological correlates among school-going adolescents in four ASEAN countries
title_full_unstemmed Unintentional injuries and socio-psychological correlates among school-going adolescents in four ASEAN countries
title_sort unintentional injuries and socio-psychological correlates among school-going adolescents in four asean countries
publishDate 2020
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/52081
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