The importance of poisoning vs. road traffic injuries as a cause of death in rural Sri Lanka.

<h4>Background</h4>Road traffic crashes are considered by the WHO to be the most important global cause of death from injury. However, this may not be true for large areas of rural Asia where road vehicles are uncommon. The issue is important, since emphasising the importance of road tra...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael Eddleston, Nilantha Udayakumara, Sriyantha Adhikari, Dhamika de Silva, M H Rezvi Sheriff, Dhananjaya L Waidyaratne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-07-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0000599&type=printable
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850183454128340992
author Michael Eddleston
Nilantha Udayakumara
Sriyantha Adhikari
Dhamika de Silva
M H Rezvi Sheriff
Dhananjaya L Waidyaratne
author_facet Michael Eddleston
Nilantha Udayakumara
Sriyantha Adhikari
Dhamika de Silva
M H Rezvi Sheriff
Dhananjaya L Waidyaratne
author_sort Michael Eddleston
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Background</h4>Road traffic crashes are considered by the WHO to be the most important global cause of death from injury. However, this may not be true for large areas of rural Asia where road vehicles are uncommon. The issue is important, since emphasising the importance of road traffic crashes risks switching resources to urban areas, away from already underfunded rural regions. In this study, we compared the importance of road traffic crashes with other forms of injury in a poor rural region of South Asia.<h4>Methodology/principal findings</h4>We collected data on all deaths from injury in the North Central Province of Sri Lanka (NCP; population 1,105,198 at 2001 census) over 18 months using coronial, hospital, and police data. We calculated the incidence of death from all forms of intentional and unintentional injury in the province. The annual incidence of death from injury in the province was high: 84.2 per 100,000 population. Half of the deaths were from self-harm (41.3/100,000). Poisoning (35.7/100,000)-in particular, pesticide self-poisoning (23.7/100,000)-was the most common cause of death, being 3.9-fold more common than road traffic crashes (9.1/100,000).<h4>Conclusions/significance</h4>In poor rural regions of South Asia, fatal self-harm and pesticide self-poisoning in particular are significantly more important than road traffic injuries as a cause of death. It is possible that the data used by the WHO to calculate global injury estimates are biased towards urban areas with better data collection but little pesticide poisoning. More studies are required to inform a debate about the importance of different forms of injury and how avoidable deaths from any cause can be prevented. In the meantime, marked improvements in the effectiveness of therapy for pesticide poisoning, safer storage, reduced pesticide use, or reductions in pesticide toxicity are required urgently to reduce the number of deaths from self-poisoning in rural Asia.
format Article
id doaj-art-add4d98458ba4e319d33271b89f26cc4
institution OA Journals
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2007-07-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-add4d98458ba4e319d33271b89f26cc42025-08-20T02:17:20ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032007-07-0127e59910.1371/journal.pone.0000599The importance of poisoning vs. road traffic injuries as a cause of death in rural Sri Lanka.Michael EddlestonNilantha UdayakumaraSriyantha AdhikariDhamika de SilvaM H Rezvi SheriffDhananjaya L Waidyaratne<h4>Background</h4>Road traffic crashes are considered by the WHO to be the most important global cause of death from injury. However, this may not be true for large areas of rural Asia where road vehicles are uncommon. The issue is important, since emphasising the importance of road traffic crashes risks switching resources to urban areas, away from already underfunded rural regions. In this study, we compared the importance of road traffic crashes with other forms of injury in a poor rural region of South Asia.<h4>Methodology/principal findings</h4>We collected data on all deaths from injury in the North Central Province of Sri Lanka (NCP; population 1,105,198 at 2001 census) over 18 months using coronial, hospital, and police data. We calculated the incidence of death from all forms of intentional and unintentional injury in the province. The annual incidence of death from injury in the province was high: 84.2 per 100,000 population. Half of the deaths were from self-harm (41.3/100,000). Poisoning (35.7/100,000)-in particular, pesticide self-poisoning (23.7/100,000)-was the most common cause of death, being 3.9-fold more common than road traffic crashes (9.1/100,000).<h4>Conclusions/significance</h4>In poor rural regions of South Asia, fatal self-harm and pesticide self-poisoning in particular are significantly more important than road traffic injuries as a cause of death. It is possible that the data used by the WHO to calculate global injury estimates are biased towards urban areas with better data collection but little pesticide poisoning. More studies are required to inform a debate about the importance of different forms of injury and how avoidable deaths from any cause can be prevented. In the meantime, marked improvements in the effectiveness of therapy for pesticide poisoning, safer storage, reduced pesticide use, or reductions in pesticide toxicity are required urgently to reduce the number of deaths from self-poisoning in rural Asia.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0000599&type=printable
spellingShingle Michael Eddleston
Nilantha Udayakumara
Sriyantha Adhikari
Dhamika de Silva
M H Rezvi Sheriff
Dhananjaya L Waidyaratne
The importance of poisoning vs. road traffic injuries as a cause of death in rural Sri Lanka.
PLoS ONE
title The importance of poisoning vs. road traffic injuries as a cause of death in rural Sri Lanka.
title_full The importance of poisoning vs. road traffic injuries as a cause of death in rural Sri Lanka.
title_fullStr The importance of poisoning vs. road traffic injuries as a cause of death in rural Sri Lanka.
title_full_unstemmed The importance of poisoning vs. road traffic injuries as a cause of death in rural Sri Lanka.
title_short The importance of poisoning vs. road traffic injuries as a cause of death in rural Sri Lanka.
title_sort importance of poisoning vs road traffic injuries as a cause of death in rural sri lanka
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0000599&type=printable
work_keys_str_mv AT michaeleddleston theimportanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT nilanthaudayakumara theimportanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT sriyanthaadhikari theimportanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT dhamikadesilva theimportanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT mhrezvisheriff theimportanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT dhananjayalwaidyaratne theimportanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT michaeleddleston importanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT nilanthaudayakumara importanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT sriyanthaadhikari importanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT dhamikadesilva importanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT mhrezvisheriff importanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka
AT dhananjayalwaidyaratne importanceofpoisoningvsroadtrafficinjuriesasacauseofdeathinruralsrilanka