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        Persons using assistive technology might not be able to fully access information in this file. For assistance, please send e-mail to: mmwrq@cdc.gov. Type 508 Accommodation and the title of the report in the subject line of e-mail.

        Vital Signs: Unintentional Injury Deaths Among Persons Aged 0–19 Years — United States, 2000–2009


        On April 16, 2012, this report was posted as an MMWR Early Release on the MMWR website (http://www.cy118119.com/mmwr).


        Abstract

        Background: Unintentional injuries are the leading cause of death in the United States for persons aged 1–19 years and the fifth leading cause of death for newborns and infants aged <1 year. This report describes 10-year trends in unintentional injury deaths among persons aged 0–19 years.

        Methods: CDC analyzed 2000–2009 mortality data from the National Vital Statistics System by age group, sex, race/ethnicity, injury mechanism, and state.

        Results: From 2000 to 2009, the overall annual unintentional injury death rate decreased 29%, from 15.5 to 11.0 per 100,000 population, accounting for 9,143 deaths in 2009. The rate decreased among all age groups except newborns and infants aged <1 year; in this age group, rates increased from 23.1 to 27.7 per 100,000 primarily as a result of an increase in reported suffocations. The poisoning death rate among teens aged 15–19 years nearly doubled, from 1.7 to 3.3 per 100,000, in part because of an increase in prescription drug overdoses (e.g., opioid pain relievers). Childhood motor vehicle traffic–related death rates declined 41%; however, these deaths remain the leading cause of unintentional injury death. Among states, unintentional injury death rates varied widely, from 4.0 to 25.1 per 100,000 in 2009.

        Conclusions and Implications for Public Health Practice: Although the annual rate is declining, unintentional injury remains the leading cause of death among children and adolescents in the United States, led by motor vehicle traffic–related deaths. Death rates from infant suffocation and teen poisoning are increasing. The 2012 National Action Plan for Child Injury Prevention provides actions in surveillance, research, communication, education, health care, and public policy to guide efforts in saving lives by reducing injuries.

        Introduction

        Unintentional injuries are the leading cause of death in the United States among persons aged 1–19 years, accounting for 37% of all deaths in this age group in 2009, and the fifth leading cause of death among newborns and infants aged <1 year (1). Unintentional injury deaths are responsible for more years of potential life lost before age 65 years than cancer, heart disease, or any other cause of death, in part because children and adolescents die from unintentional injuries much more commonly than other causes (1). For every childhood injury death, more than 1,000 are treated or receive medical consultation for a nonfatal injury (2). In 2009, child and adolescent unintentional injuries resulted in approximately 9,000 deaths, 225,000 hospitalizations, and 8.4 million patients treated and released from emergency departments (1). Unintentional injuries occurring in 2005 that resulted in death, hospitalization, or an emergency department visit cost nearly $11.5 billion in medical expenses (1). These injuries are preventable (3,4), and effective interventions for reducing childhood injuries are less costly than the medical expenses and productivity losses associated with those injuries (5).

        The high incidence and preventability of child and adolescent unintentional injuries highlight the need for public health action. Although unintentional injury death rates have decreased in recent decades (6), rates remain high in some population subgroups and states (7). This report summarizes trends in unintentional injury deaths among persons aged 0–19 years, from 2000 to 2009, by age group, sex, race/ethnicity, injury mechanism, and state, using data from the National Vital Statistics System.

        Methods

        CDC's National Vital Statistics System collects death certificate data from 50 states and the District of Columbia.* Annual mortality files were analyzed for deaths among persons aged 0–19 years. Unintentional injury deaths were defined as those with an underlying cause of death classified by International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10) external cause of injury codes as V01–X59 or Y85–Y86. Deaths were categorized by mechanism as drowning, fall, fire/burn, motor vehicle traffic–related, other transportation-related, poisoning, suffocation, and all other, using the external cause-of-injury mortality matrix. Motor vehicle traffic-related deaths were divided further into occupant, pedestrian, pedal cyclist, unspecified, and all other motor vehicle traffic–related deaths. Race/ethnicity was coded into five mutually exclusive categories: Hispanic (of any race), and four non-Hispanic racial groups (white, black, American Indian/Alaska Native, and Asian/Pacific Islander). Annual death rates were calculated using population totals from the U.S. Census.§ Weighted least squares regression was used to test for linear trends in death rates over time, using all years of data. A p value of <0.05 indicated statistical significance.

        Results

        From 2000 to 2009, the overall annual unintentional injury death rate declined 29% among persons aged 0–19 years, from 15.5 to 11.0 per 100,000 (Table 1). The rate for males was higher than that for females in each age group. Among both males and females, the death rate declined 29%: from 19.9 to 14.1 per 100,000 for males and from 10.8 to 7.7 per 100,000 for females. A significant linear decline across all racial/ethnic groups was observed, with declines ranging from 21% among blacks to 38% among Asian/Pacific Islanders (Table 1). American Indian/Alaska Natives had the highest death rate throughout the study period, at 30.4 per 100,000 in 2000 and 23.8 in 2009, nearly double that of blacks (16.2 and 12.8), the population with the next highest rates in 2009.

        By injury mechanism, motor vehicle traffic–related death rates decreased 41%, from 9.3 to 5.5 per 100,000, yet that category recorded the most deaths in 2000 (7,497) and 2009 (4,564) to remain the leading cause of unintentional injury death among persons aged 0–19 years. Drowning, other transportation, fire/burn, fall, and all other unintentional injuries also showed significant linear declines, whereas both suffocation and poisoning showed significant linear increases (30% and 80%, respectively) (Table 1).

        Death rates varied substantially by age group and mechanism, with the highest rates in the youngest (aged <1 year) and oldest (15–19 years) age groups (Figure). The overall rate decreased among all age groups except children aged <1 year, whose death rate increased from 23.1 to 27.7 per 100,000, surpassing rates among persons aged 15–19 years (Table 2). This increase can be attributed largely to a rise in suffocation death rates, which increased from 13.8 to 21.3 per 100,000, claiming the lives of 907 newborns and infants in 2009. The death rate for those aged 15–19 years declined 33%, from 33.4 to 22.3 per 100,000, most notably as a result of a 41% decline in motor vehicle traffic–related death rates from 25.3 to 15.1 per 100,000. However, poisoning death rates in the 15–19 year age group increased by 91%, from 1.7 to 3.3 per 100,000 over the same period (Table 2).

        Wide variations in death rates were found among states, with 2009 rates ranging from 4.0 per 100,000 in Massachusetts and 4.5 in New Jersey to 23.6 per 100,000 in South Dakota and 25.1 in Mississippi (Table 3). In 11 states, death rates were significantly lower than the overall national rate of 11.0 per 100,000, and 21 states had rates that were significantly higher than 11.0. No states had significant linear increases in child and adolescent unintentional injury death rates; however, 31 states showed significant linear decreases. The largest decreases occurred in Delaware, Oregon, Iowa, and Virginia, where rates declined by at least 45%.

        Conclusions and Comments

        This report is the first from CDC to describe trends over time in child and adolescent unintentional injury deaths by mechanism and state. Population subgroup results generally are consistent with previous research. For example, males had higher death rates than females in each age group, racial/ethnic differences were observed with the highest rates among American Indians/Alaska Natives, and motor vehicle traffic–related injuries were the leading cause of unintentional injury death among the three oldest age groups (7,8). The wide variations in death rates among states suggest that environment, exposure to hazards (e.g., vehicle miles traveled, exposure to water settings, urban or rural environment), and differences in public policy might play a role. In 2009, if the overall national rate had been equal to the lowest state unintentional injury death rate, 5,785 lives would have been saved.

        The high incidence of infant suffocation underscores the importance of a safe sleeping environment as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics, which includes supine positioning, a firm sleep surface, room-sharing without bed-sharing, and avoiding loose bedding (9). CDC has developed the Sudden Unexpected Infant Death (SUID) Case Registry, aimed at better understanding and ultimately preventing SUID deaths, which include suffocation in bed.**

        The increasing trend in poisoning deaths among those aged 15–19 years is consistent with the reported increases in drug poisoning deaths seen in the U.S. population overall during this period (10). Poisoning deaths from prescription drug misuse is a growing concern (11); during 2002–2004 an estimated 13.5% of those aged 12–17 years reported ever having misused prescription drugs (12). The percentage of poisoning deaths among those aged 15–19 years with prescription drugs as a contributing cause increased from 30% in 2000 to 57% in 2009 (13). Strategies to reduce the misuse of prescription drugs include appropriate prescribing, proper storage and disposal, discouraging medication sharing, and state-based prescription drug monitoring programs (11).

        Improvements in seat belt use, child safety seat and booster seat use, licensing requirements, vehicle design, the road environment, and reductions in alcohol-impaired driving likely contributed to the decline in motor vehicle traffic–related deaths (4,14). Despite this success, traffic crashes remain the leading cause of death for persons in age groups 5–19 years, accounting for 67% of unintentional injury deaths and 28% of deaths from all causes among those aged 15–19 years in 2009 (1). Increasing seat belt use and implementing components of graduated driver licensing practices, such as limiting nighttime driving and limiting teen passengers, likely can lead to further declines. Parents can learn how to reduce their teens' risks of motor vehicle-related injury through the CDC's teen driving initiative, Parents are the Key (http://www.cy118119.com/parentsarethekey/index.html). For communities, the Guide to Community Preventive Services provides evidenced-based strategies to reduce motor vehicle traffic–related injuries (e.g., laws mandating child safety seat use and primary enforcement of seat belt use, and multiple measures to reduce alcohol-impaired driving) (http://www.thecommunityguide.org/mvoi/index.html).

        Even with the reported declines, the U.S. unintentional injury death rate among persons aged 0–19 years does not compare favorably with other developed countries. Among the 34 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development countries, the U.S. unintentional injury death rate for persons aged 0–14 years ranked 30th in 2008, with a rate four times higher than the top performing nations (15). Among persons aged 0–19 years, unintentional injury death rates in 2004 in the United States were almost twice the combined rates of high-income countries in the World Health Organization's European and Western Pacific Regions (4).

        The findings in this report are subject to at least two limitations. First, fatalities are based on death certificate data and are subject to misclassification errors if a mechanism is not specified correctly on the death certificate or if classification standards have changed over time. For example, challenges in distinguishing between sudden infant death syndrome and suffocation combined with reporting differences among those completing death certificates might be contributing factors in the increase in reported suffocation deaths among newborns and infants (9). Second, this report is limited to unintentional injury deaths; excluding nonfatal injuries substantially underreports the total burden from injury on society and the medical care system (1).

        The frequency and cost of child and adolescent unintentional injury deaths, along with the effectiveness of existing public health interventions, make injury prevention a priority for improving the health of children and adolescents. Efforts to prevent these deaths likely will result in fewer nonfatal injuries as well. Although unintentional injury death rates are declining, findings reported here demonstrate the need to take further action. CDC has developed the Protect the Ones You Love Initiative to help parents reduce unintentional injuries from burns, drowning, falls, poisonings, motor vehicle crashes, suffocation, and sports (http://www.cy118119.com/safechild). Health-care providers, educators, community members and others also can take steps to reduce child injury. CDC and its partners have released the National Action Plan for Child Injury Prevention, providing actions in surveillance, research, communication, education, health care, and public policy (http://www.cy118119.com/safechild/nap). Implementing the National Action Plan could result in significant reductions in needless deaths, injuries, and costs associated with injuries among children and adolescents in the United States.

        Reported by

        Julie Gilchrist, MD, Michael F. Ballesteros, PhD, Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Erin M. Parker, PhD, EIS Officer, CDC. Corresponding contributor: Erin M. Parker, eparker@cdc.gov, 770-488-8477.

        References

        1. CDC. Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS). Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2009. Available at http://www.cy118119.com/injury/wisqars/index.html. Accessed March 13, 2012.
        2. National Center for Health Statistics. National Health Interview Survey 2009 data release. Hyattsville, MD: CDC, National Center for Health Statistics; 2010. Available at http://www.cy118119.com/nchs/nhis/nhis_2009_data_release.htm. Accessed March 13, 2012.
        3. Doll LS, Bonzo SE, Mercy JA, Sleet DA, eds. Handbook of injury and violence prevention. New York, NY: Springer; 2007.
        4. Peden M, Oyegbite K, Ozanne-Smith J, Hyder AA, Branche C, Rahman AKM, et al., eds. World report on child injury prevention. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; 2008. Available at http://www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/child/injury/world_report/report/en/index.html. Accessed March 13, 2012.
        5. Miller TR, Finkelstein AE, Zaloshnja E, Hendrie D. The cost of child and adolescent injuries and the savings from prevention. In: Liller KD, ed. Injury prevention for children and adolescents: research, practice, and advocacy. 2nd ed. Washington, DC: American Public Health Association 2012.
        6. Singh G, Kogan M. Widening socioeconomic disparities in U.S. childhood mortality, 1969–2000. Am J Public Health 2007;97:1658–65.
        7. Borse N, Gilchrist J, Dellinger A, Rudd R, Ballesteros M, Sleet D. CDC childhood injury report: patterns of unintentional injuries among 0–19 year olds in the United States, 2000–2006. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2008. Available at http://www.cy118119.com/safechild/childhoodinjuryreport/index.html. Accessed March 13, 2012.
        8. Ballesteros MF, Sleet DA. Epidemiology of injuries among children and adolescents: focus on unintentional injuries. In: Liller KD, ed. Injury prevention for children and adolescents: research, practice, and advocacy. 2nd ed. Washington, DC: American Public Health Association 2012.
        9. Task force on Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Moon RY. SIDS and other sleep-related infant deaths: expansion of recommendations for a safe infant sleeping environment. Pediatrics 2011;128:1030–9.
        10. Warner M, Chen LH, Makuc DM, Anderson RN, Mini?o AM. Drug poisoning deaths in the United States, 1980–2008. NCHS data brief no. 81. Hyattsville, MD: CDC, National Center for Health Statistics; 2011. Available at http://www.cy118119.com/nchs/data/databriefs/db81.htm. Accessed March 13, 2012.
        11. CDC. Vital signs: overdoses of prescription opioid pain relievers —United States, 1999–2008. MMWR 2011;60:1487–92.
        12. Colliver JD, Kroutil LA, Dai L, Gfroerer JC. Office of Applied Studies. Misuse of prescription drugs: Data from: 2002–2004 national surveys on drug use and health. Table 5. Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Office of Applied Studies; 2006. Available at http://www.oas.samhsa.gov/prescription/appd.htm#tab5-2b. Accessed March 13, 2012.
        13. CDC. WONDER [Database]. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2011. Available at http://wonder.cdc.gov/mcd-icd10.html. Accessed April 9, 2012.
        14. Longthorne A, Subramanian R, Chen CL. An analysis of the significant decline in motor vehicle traffic crashes in 2008. DOT HS 811 346. Washington, DC: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration; 2010. Available at http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/pubs/811346.pdf. Accessed March 13, 2012.
        15. Global Health Observatory Data Repository. Mortality and burden of disease: disease and injury country estimates, 2008, by sex and age. Available at http://apps.who.int/ghodata. Accessed February 16, 2010.

        * Additional information available at http://www.cy118119.com/nchs/nvss.htm.

        Additional information available at http://www.cy118119.com/nchs/injury/injury_tools.htm.

        § Additional information available at http://www.cy118119.com/nchs/nvss/bridged_race.htm.

        "Suffocation" refers to ICD-10 codes W75–W84. In 2009 73% of infant and newborn suffocation deaths were coded W75: accidental suffocation or strangulation in bed.

        ** Additional information available at http://www.cy118119.com/sids/suidabout.htm.


        Key Points

        • Unintentional injuries are the leading cause of death among persons aged 1–19 years and the fifth leading cause of death for newborns and infants aged <1 year. Nearly two in five deaths among persons aged 1–19 years are caused by unintentional injuries.
        • From 2000 to 2009, the overall unintentional injury death rate among persons aged 0–19 years decreased 29%, from 15.5 to 11.0 per 100,000. Motor vehicle traffic–related deaths declined, but remain the leading cause of injury deaths.
        • Wide variations in death rates were found among states with the rate for Mississippi more than six times the rate for Massachusetts.
        • Unintentional infant suffocation death rates increased 54% during 2000–2009, driving the overall increase in newborn and infant unintentional injury death rates.
        • Poisoning death rates increased 91% among persons aged 15–19 years.
        • Unintentional injury deaths are preventable, and efforts to increase child and adolescent safety through evidence-based prevention initiatives can reduce death rates even further.
        • The National Action Plan for Child Injury Prevention provides a framework to address child unintentional injury prevention with specific actions in surveillance, research, communication, education, health care, and public policy (http://www.cy118119.com/safechild/nap). Taking steps to implement the National Action Plan could result in substantial reductions in needless deaths, injuries, and costs associated with injuries among children and adolescents in the United States.

        TABLE 1. Number of unintentional injury deaths and annual death rates* among persons aged ≤19 years, by sex, race/ethnicity, and mechanism — National Vital Statistics System, United States, 2000–2009

        Sex, Race/Ethnicity, and Mechanism

        No. of deaths

        Death rate

        % change from 2000 to 2009

        p value§

        2000

        2009

        2000

        2001

        2002

        2003

        2004

        2005

        2006

        2007

        2008

        2009

        United States overall

        12,441

        9,143

        15.5

        15.0

        15.3

        14.8

        14.9

        14.4

        14.2

        14.0

        12.2

        11.0

        -29

        <0.001

        Sex

        Male

        8,217

        6,016

        19.9

        19.5

        19.9

        19.1

        19.0

        18.4

        18.2

        17.9

        15.9

        14.1

        -29

        <0.001

        Female

        4,224

        3,127

        10.8

        10.3

        10.5

        10.3

        10.6

        10.1

        9.9

        9.8

        8.4

        7.7

        -29

        0.002

        Race/Ethnicity

        American Indian/Alaska Native

        265

        200

        30.4

        30.5

        28.6

        30.1

        26.4

        28.1

        28.4

        27.3

        24.2

        23.8

        -22

        <0.001

        Black

        2,004

        1,615

        16.2

        16.0

        16.2

        14.3

        15.0

        15.0

        15.2

        15.2

        13.4

        12.8

        -21

        0.003

        White

        8,183

        5,467

        16.3

        15.8

        16.1

        15.7

        16.2

        15.2

        14.8

        15.1

        13.4

        11.5

        -29

        0.002

        Hispanic

        1,691

        1,625

        12.4

        12.1

        12.5

        12.5

        11.6

        12.2

        12.1

        10.6

        9.1

        8.8

        -28

        0.002

        Asian/Pacific Islander

        252

        194

        7.8

        8.0

        8.6

        8.0

        7.4

        6.8

        7.1

        6.9

        5.3

        4.8

        -38

        <0.001

        Missing data

        46

        42

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        NA

        Mechanism**

        Motor vehicle traffic††

        7,497

        4,564

        9.3

        9.1

        9.4

        9.0

        8.9

        8.3

        8.1

        7.6

        6.1

        5.5

        -41

        <0.001

        Occupant

        3,571

        1,953

        4.4

        4.5

        5.1

        4.7

        4.6

        4.2

        3.9

        3.5

        2.5

        2.3

        -47

        <0.001

        Unspecified

        2,794

        1,866

        3.5

        3.2

        3.0

        2.9

        3.0

        2.8

        2.9

        2.9

        2.5

        2.2

        -36

        <0.001

        Pedestrian

        767

        504

        1.0

        1.0

        0.9

        0.9

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.7

        0.6

        -37

        <0.001

        Other

        185

        152

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.3

        0.3

        0.3

        0.3

        0.3

        0.3

        0.2

        -21

        0.999

        Pedal cyclist

        180

        89

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.1

        0.1

        0.1

        -52

        <0.001

        Suffocation

        864

        1,160

        1.1

        1.1

        1.2

        1.1

        1.3

        1.3

        1.4

        1.5

        1.6

        1.4

        30

        <0.001

        Drowning

        1,314

        983

        1.6

        1.5

        1.4

        1.3

        1.3

        1.4

        1.3

        1.3

        1.2

        1.2

        -28

        <0.001

        Poisoning

        442

        824

        0.5

        0.6

        0.7

        0.8

        0.9

        0.9

        1.0

        1.2

        1.1

        1.0

        80

        <0.001

        Other transportation

        743

        541

        0.9

        0.8

        0.7

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.7

        0.7

        0.6

        -30

        0.010

        Fire/Burn

        682

        391

        0.8

        0.8

        0.7

        0.7

        0.7

        0.6

        0.6

        0.7

        0.5

        0.5

        -45

        <0.001

        Fall

        180

        151

        0.2

        0.3

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        -19

        0.018

        All other

        719

        529

        0.9

        0.9

        0.9

        0.8

        0.8

        0.9

        0.8

        0.8

        0.7

        0.6

        -29

        0.001

        Abbreviation: NA = not applicable.

        * Per 100,000 population.

        Percentage change might not match calculations because of rounding.

        § P value from weighted least squares regression to assess linear trend significance during 2000–2009.

        Hispanics, who might be of any race, were not inluded in any of the racial categories.

        ** Underlying cause of death mechanism classified by the International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10) external cause of injury codes. Motor vehicle traffic: Occupant ([V30–V79](.4–.9), [V83–V86](.0–.3)), Unspecified , (V87(.0–.8), V89.2), Pedestrian ([V02–V04](.1,.9), V09.2), Other (including motorcyclist) ([V20–V28](.3–.9), V29(.4–.9), V80(.3–.5), V81.1, V82.1), and Pedal cyclist ([V12–V14](.3–.9), V19(.4–.6)). Suffocation (W75–W84); Drowning (W65–W74); Poisoning (X40–X49); Other transportation (V01, [V02–V04](.0), V05, V06, V09(.0–.1,.3,.9), V10–V11, [V12–V14](.0–.2), V15–V18, V19(.0–.3,.8,.9), [V20–V28](.0–.2), [V29–V79](.0–.3), V80(.0–.2,.6–.9), [V81–V82](.0,.2–.9), [V83–V86](.4–.9), V87.9, V88(.0–.9), V89(.0,.1,.3,.9), V90–V99)); Fire/Burn (X00–X19); Fall (W00–W19). All other (mechanisms aggregated in table): cut or pierced (W25–W29, W45, W46), unintentional firearm (W32–W34), machinery (W24, W30–W31), natural and environmental (W42–W43, W53–W64, W92–W99, X20–X39, X51–X57), overexertion (X50), struck by or against (W20–W22, W50–W52), other specified (W23, W35–W41, W44, W49, W85–W91, Y85, X58,Y86), and unspecified (X59).

        †† Categorized by injured person.


        Figure. Annual unintentional injury death rates* among persons aged ≤19 years, by age group — National Vital Statistics System, United States, 2000–2009

        The figure above shows annual unintentional injury death rates among persons aged ≤19 years, by age group in the United States, during 2000-2009, according to the National Vital Statistics System. Death rates varied substantially by age group and mechanism, with the highest rates in the youngest (aged <1 year) and oldest (15-19 years) age groups.

        * Per 100,000 population.

        Alternate Text: The figure above shows annual unintentional injury death rates among persons aged ≤19 years, by age group in the United States, during 2000-2009, according to the National Vital Statistics System. Death rates varied substantially by age group and mechanism, with the highest rates in the youngest (aged <1 year) and oldest (15-19 years) age groups.


        TABLE 2. Number of unintentional injury deaths and annual death rates* among persons aged ≤19 years, by age group and mechanism — National Vital Statistics System, United States, 2000–2009

        Age group/Mechanism

        No. of deaths

        Death rate

        % change from 2000 to 2009

        p value§

        2000

        2009

        2009

        (%)

        2000

        2001

        2002

        2003

        2004

        2005

        2006

        2007

        2008

        2009

        Total 0–19 yrs

        12,441

        9,143

        (100.0)

        15.5

        15.0

        15.3

        14.8

        14.9

        14.4

        14.2

        14.0

        12.2

        11.0

        -29

        <0.001

        <1 yr

        Total

        881

        1,181

        (100.0)

        23.1

        24.2

        23.7

        23.4

        25.6

        26.3

        27.5

        29.9

        30.7

        27.7

        20

        <0.001

        Suffocation

        526

        907

        (76.8)

        13.8

        15.2

        15.9

        15.3

        17.7

        18.2

        20.2

        22.3

        24.7

        21.3

        54

        <0.001

        Motor vehicle traffic

        162

        91

        (7.7)

        4.3

        3.4

        3.0

        3.6

        3.4

        3.4

        3.3

        2.8

        2.3

        2.1

        -50

        0.002

        Drowning

        75

        45

        (3.8)

        2.0

        1.7

        1.6

        1.4

        1.5

        1.6

        1.2

        1.3

        1.0

        1.1

        -46

        <0.001

        Fire/Burn

        39

        25

        (2.1)

        1.0

        1.2

        1.0

        0.8

        0.7

        0.9

        0.7

        0.9

        0.5

        0.6

        -43

        0.006

        Poisoning

        14

        22

        (1.9)

        0.7

        0.5

        0.5

        0.5

        NA

        NA

        Fall

        8

        19

        (1.6)

        0.6

        0.6

        0.6

        0.6

        NA

        NA

        Other transportation

        12

        6

        (0.5)

        NA

        NA

        All other

        45

        66

        (5.6)

        1.2

        1.4

        1.0

        1.3

        1.4

        1.3

        1.1

        1.4

        1.5

        1.5

        31

        0.120

        1–4 yrs

        Total

        1,826

        1,466

        (100.0)

        11.9

        11.1

        10.5

        10.8

        10.2

        10.2

        9.8

        9.6

        8.7

        8.6

        -28

        <0.001

        Drowning

        493

        450

        (30.7)

        3.2

        3.0

        2.9

        2.9

        2.7

        3.0

        2.8

        2.8

        2.6

        2.6

        -18

        0.006

        Motor vehicle traffic

        563

        362

        (24.7)

        3.7

        3.6

        3.4

        3.2

        3.2

        3.0

        2.9

        2.6

        2.1

        2.1

        -42

        <0.001

        Fire/Burn

        297

        169

        (11.5)

        1.9

        1.5

        1.4

        1.4

        1.4

        1.3

        1.2

        1.2

        1.0

        1.0

        -49

        <0.001

        Other transportation

        127

        147

        (10.0)

        0.8

        0.7

        0.6

        0.9

        0.8

        1.0

        0.8

        0.9

        0.8

        0.9

        4

        0.161

        Suffocation

        151

        125

        (8.5)

        1.0

        0.9

        0.9

        1.0

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.9

        0.9

        0.7

        -25

        0.061

        Fall

        36

        46

        (3.1)

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.3

        0.3

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.3

        15

        0.995

        Poisoning

        32

        37

        (2.5)

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.3

        0.1

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        4

        0.937

        All other

        127

        130

        (8.9)

        0.8

        1.0

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.9

        0.8

        -8

        0.512

        5–9 yrs

        Total

        1,391

        773

        (100.0)

        6.8

        6.3

        5.9

        5.5

        5.7

        5.5

        5.3

        4.8

        4.1

        3.8

        -45

        <0.001

        Motor vehicle traffic

        731

        378

        (48.9)

        3.6

        3.3

        3.1

        3.0

        3.0

        2.9

        2.6

        2.3

        1.9

        1.8

        -48

        <0.001

        Drowning

        201

        119

        (15.4)

        1.0

        0.8

        0.8

        0.6

        0.7

        0.6

        0.7

        0.6

        0.7

        0.6

        -41

        0.008

        Fire/Burn

        183

        88

        (11.4)

        0.9

        0.8

        0.8

        0.7

        0.9

        0.7

        0.6

        0.7

        0.5

        0.4

        -52

        <0.001

        Other transportation

        106

        68

        (8.8)

        0.5

        0.5

        0.4

        0.5

        0.5

        0.4

        0.5

        0.4

        0.3

        0.3

        -36

        0.023

        Suffocation

        45

        26

        (3.4)

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.3

        0.2

        0.2

        0.1

        -42

        0.124

        Poisoning

        17

        13

        (1.7)

        NA

        NA

        Fall

        16

        12

        (1.6)

        0.2

        0.1

        NA

        NA

        All other

        92

        69

        (8.9)

        0.4

        0.4

        0.5

        0.4

        0.4

        0.5

        0.4

        0.5

        0.3

        0.3

        -25

        0.070

        10–14 yrs

        Total

        1,588

        916

        (100.0)

        7.7

        7.4

        7.3

        7.2

        7.3

        6.4

        5.9

        6.0

        5.1

        4.6

        -41

        <0.001

        Motor vehicle traffic

        916

        491

        (53.6)

        4.5

        4.2

        4.1

        4.3

        4.4

        3.7

        3.4

        3.4

        2.6

        2.5

        -45

        <0.001

        Other transportation

        161

        117

        (12.8)

        0.8

        0.8

        0.7

        0.7

        0.7

        0.6

        0.6

        0.6

        0.5

        0.6

        -25

        <0.001

        Drowning

        174

        90

        (9.8)

        0.8

        0.8

        0.8

        0.7

        0.7

        0.6

        0.6

        0.5

        0.6

        0.5

        -47

        <0.001

        Fire/Burn

        84

        53

        (5.8)

        0.4

        0.4

        0.5

        0.4

        0.4

        0.4

        0.3

        0.4

        0.3

        0.3

        -35

        0.006

        Suffocation

        72

        41

        (4.5)

        0.4

        0.3

        0.3

        0.2

        0.3

        0.3

        0.3

        0.3

        0.2

        0.2

        -41

        0.062

        Poisoning

        28

        37

        (4.0)

        0.1

        0.2

        0.1

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.2

        0.3

        0.2

        0.2

        36

        0.116

        Fall

        21

        16

        (1.7)

        0.1

        0.2

        0.1

        0.1

        0.1

        0.1

        0.1

        NA

        NA

        All other

        132

        71

        (7.8)

        0.6

        0.6

        0.6

        0.6

        0.5

        0.6

        0.4

        0.4

        0.5

        0.4

        -45

        0.002

        15–19 yrs

        Total

        6,755

        4,807

        (100.0)

        33.4

        32.6

        34.9

        32.8

        32.8

        31.3

        31.2

        30.1

        25.6

        22.3

        -33

        0.001

        Motor vehicle traffic

        5,125

        3,242

        (67.4)

        25.3

        25.1

        27.0

        25.1

        24.6

        22.9

        22.5

        21.3

        17.2

        15.1

        -41

        <0.001

        Poisoning

        351

        715

        (14.9)

        1.7

        2.0

        2.4

        2.5

        3.1

        3.0

        3.5

        3.9

        3.9

        3.3

        91

        <0.001

        Drowning

        371

        279

        (5.8)

        1.8

        1.6

        1.6

        1.4

        1.5

        1.5

        1.5

        1.5

        1.3

        1.3

        -29

        0.006

        Other transportation

        337

        203

        (4.2)

        1.7

        1.3

        1.2

        1.4

        1.3

        1.3

        1.2

        1.2

        1.3

        0.9

        -43

        0.019

        Suffocation

        70

        61

        (1.3)

        0.3

        0.3

        0.3

        0.2

        0.3

        0.3

        0.4

        0.2

        0.3

        0.3

        -18

        0.160

        Fall

        99

        58

        (1.2)

        0.5

        0.4

        0.4

        0.4

        0.4

        0.4

        0.4

        0.4

        0.4

        0.3

        -45

        0.001

        Fire/Burn

        79

        56

        (1.2)

        0.4

        0.4

        0.4

        0.4

        0.3

        0.3

        0.4

        0.4

        0.3

        0.3

        -33

        0.040

        All other

        323

        193

        (4.0)

        1.6

        1.6

        1.6

        1.4

        1.4

        1.6

        1.4

        1.2

        1.0

        0.9

        -44

        0.001

        Abbreviation: NA = not applicable.

        * Per 100,000 population.

        Percentage change might not match calculations because of rounding.

        § P value from weighted least squares regression to assess linear trend significance 2000–2009.

        Death rates based on fewer than 20 deaths suppressed for unreliability.


        TABLE 3. Number of unintentional injury deaths and annual death rates* among persons aged ≤19 years, by state — National Vital Statistics System, United States, 2000–2009

        State

        No. of deaths

        Death rate

        % change from 2000 to 2009

        p value§

        2000

        2009

        2000

        2001

        2002

        2003

        2004

        2005

        2006

        2007

        2008

        2009

        United States overall

        12,441

        9,143

        15.5

        15.0

        15.3

        14.8

        14.9

        14.4

        14.2

        14.0

        12.2

        11.0

        -29

        <0.001

        States with death rates significantly higher than overall U.S. rate of 11.0 in 2009**

        Mississippi

        268

        216

        30.7

        28.9

        29.8

        25.9

        27.4

        29.7

        26.8

        30.7

        22.2

        25.1

        -18

        0.061

        South Dakota

        68

        53

        29.9

        24.3

        26.8

        25.6

        28.8

        28.4

        22.6

        17.0

        18.4

        23.6

        -21

        0.030

        Montana

        81

        51

        31.5

        17.2

        25.3

        26.3

        27.6

        17.7

        24.6

        19.7

        20.9

        20.5

        -35

        0.346

        Wyoming

        38

        30

        26.1

        21.8

        28.3

        26.5

        21.6

        23.2

        28.0

        21.8

        24.2

        20.2

        -23

        0.236

        Louisiana

        304

        253

        22.2

        24.1

        25.6

        21.5

        25.9

        24.0

        21.1

        21.0

        23.4

        20.1

        -9

        0.184

        Oklahoma

        229

        200

        22.8

        23.3

        18.5

        19.0

        24.2

        22.4

        23.1

        22.1

        20.0

        19.5

        -15

        0.582

        Alaska

        69

        39

        33.2

        28.4

        19.7

        25.9

        25.0

        25.7

        24.3

        24.1

        23.3

        19.0

        -43

        0.072

        South Carolina

        252

        219

        22.2

        24.2

        23.9

        18.4

        21.3

        21.8

        21.2

        22.7

        19.1

        18.0

        -19

        0.071

        New Mexico

        118

        100

        20.9

        18.1

        21.1

        22.5

        20.3

        20.8

        18.6

        18.7

        14.7

        17.6

        -16

        0.048

        Arkansas

        201

        139

        26.4

        28.4

        24.9

        23.8

        27.4

        26.6

        24.1

        23.4

        22.0

        17.6

        -34

        0.006

        Alabama

        301

        220

        24.0

        25.3

        25.4

        21.9

        23.9

        23.1

        24.8

        22.0

        19.0

        17.4

        -27

        0.006

        North Dakota

        24

        29

        13.1

        15.5

        17.0

        21.3

        17.4

        18.8

        21.4

        16.7

        13.2

        17.3

        32

        0.635

        Kentucky

        267

        190

        24.0

        22.2

        21.9

        21.4

        25.5

        23.0

        20.1

        18.3

        16.3

        16.8

        -30

        0.004

        Missouri

        372

        266

        23.3

        19.3

        21.8

        20.9

        21.1

        19.6

        20.1

        21.1

        19.6

        16.6

        -29

        0.031

        Kansas

        168

        119

        21.0

        22.5

        19.9

        19.7

        16.3

        17.0

        16.0

        16.1

        14.0

        15.1

        -28

        <0.001

        Nevada

        96

        104

        17.1

        13.7

        16.5

        18.2

        16.6

        14.2

        16.8

        15.2

        15.3

        14.0

        -18

        0.317

        Florida

        744

        621

        18.4

        17.6

        17.4

        19.1

        18.9

        20.3

        18.5

        18.6

        15.2

        13.7

        -25

        0.086

        Tennessee

        362

        227

        23.2

        20.9

        22.8

        19.9

        22.4

        19.4

        21.7

        21.4

        16.7

        13.7

        -41

        0.009

        North Carolina

        376

        328

        17.1

        17.9

        18.1

        18.5

        19.9

        17.2

        16.4

        16.6

        15.4

        12.8

        -25

        0.014

        Indiana

        324

        228

        18.4

        16.9

        16.5

        15.6

        18.0

        16.5

        17.1

        16.7

        16.6

        12.8

        -30

        0.059

        Texas

        1,198

        945

        18.3

        17.3

        17.2

        16.5

        15.5

        14.7

        15.4

        13.9

        12.9

        12.4

        -32

        <0.001

        States with death rates not significantly different from overall U.S. rate of 11.0 in 2009

        Idaho

        78

        65

        18.8

        23.6

        19.3

        17.7

        18.2

        17.2

        20.2

        18.9

        15.3

        13.9

        -26

        0.021

        West Virginia

        98

        54

        21.6

        19.3

        23.5

        22.7

        23.5

        17.8

        20.9

        20.2

        20.8

        12.4

        -43

        0.055

        Michigan

        465

        319

        16.1

        14.3

        15.7

        14.8

        14.2

        13.3

        11.8

        13.6

        11.0

        12.0

        -25

        <0.001

        Delaware

        53

        28

        24.3

        15.5

        14.5

        12.1

        17.4

        11.5

        14.4

        10.8

        10.3

        12.0

        -51

        0.027

        Nebraska

        83

        60

        16.5

        14.9

        19.3

        17.1

        16.5

        15.6

        18.4

        16.4

        14.5

        11.8

        -28

        0.104

        Wisconsin

        245

        175

        16.0

        13.0

        15.1

        15.9

        13.5

        15.5

        13.9

        15.7

        13.2

        11.8

        -26

        0.160

        Maine

        50

        36

        14.9

        16.1

        15.0

        12.7

        15.2

        15.7

        15.6

        12.9

        12.5

        11.7

        -22

        0.042

        Arizona

        279

        213

        18.4

        20.6

        17.3

        17.8

        18.3

        17.0

        17.9

        16.4

        12.2

        11.2

        -39

        0.002

        Utah

        113

        106

        13.9

        13.9

        15.6

        13.6

        11.6

        13.2

        12.3

        14.0

        10.8

        11.0

        -21

        0.022

        Hawaii

        33

        35

        10.1

        10.2

        14.3

        13.9

        9.8

        8.7

        11.5

        10.3

        8.4

        10.8

        8

        0.390

        Georgia

        446

        297

        18.5

        19.3

        17.6

        17.7

        16.5

        16.5

        15.1

        15.2

        13.6

        10.3

        -44

        <0.001

        Iowa

        155

        82

        18.7

        13.8

        14.1

        16.3

        13.5

        14.2

        11.3

        15.2

        12.8

        10.2

        -46

        0.019

        Pennsylvania

        435

        319

        13.3

        13.6

        13.8

        14.3

        13.3

        13.0

        12.1

        13.8

        11.8

        10.1

        -24

        0.015

        Washington

        249

        174

        14.8

        13.6

        13.8

        12.0

        11.9

        11.2

        13.3

        10.5

        9.7

        10.0

        -33

        <0.001

        Colorado

        167

        136

        13.6

        15.6

        15.6

        15.5

        15.0

        11.7

        12.1

        10.9

        11.4

        10.0

        -27

        0.002

        New Hampshire

        39

        29

        11.3

        13.8

        6.3

        9.2

        13.0

        11.0

        9.1

        9.2

        9.9

        8.8

        -22

        0.663

        Rhode Island

        27

        20

        9.6

        8.5

        8.5

        11.3

        9.9

        7.6

        8.1

        8.5

        §§

        7.6

        -21

        0.079

        Vermont††

        28

        17

        16.8

        13.4

        12.3

        22.9

        16.7

        NA

        NA

        States with death rates significantly lower than overall U.S. rate of 11.0 in 2009

        Ohio

        450

        278

        14.0

        13.3

        13.9

        13.1

        15.1

        13.9

        12.9

        12.5

        12.3

        9.1

        -35

        0.018

        Minnesota

        205

        122

        14.3

        13.2

        15.7

        14.1

        12.9

        10.7

        11.9

        10.5

        9.5

        8.6

        -40

        <0.001

        Oregon

        154

        84

        16.3

        14.3

        14.6

        17.0

        16.7

        13.1

        13.7

        11.6

        14.2

        8.6

        -47

        0.010

        Virginia

        280

        164

        14.5

        12.0

        13.7

        12.9

        13.3

        12.6

        12.6

        12.3

        11.7

        7.9

        -45

        0.013

        Illinois

        476

        280

        13.2

        12.6

        13.2

        11.6

        10.6

        11.1

        11.7

        12.3

        9.5

        7.9

        -40

        0.004

        Maryland

        147

        117

        9.8

        12.2

        10.8

        11.5

        11.2

        9.2

        10.1

        10.4

        8.7

        7.7

        -22

        0.020

        California

        1,038

        785

        10.1

        9.7

        10.9

        10.9

        10.3

        11.0

        10.6

        9.7

        7.6

        7.5

        -26

        0.026

        New York

        399

        334

        7.7

        9.0

        9.0

        7.6

        7.8

        7.3

        7.5

        7.7

        6.6

        6.7

        -13

        0.011

        Connecticut

        77

        59

        8.3

        9.3

        9.5

        7.9

        9.8

        8.3

        8.4

        9.2

        7.6

        6.4

        -22

        0.076

        New Jersey

        180

        102

        7.9

        9.2

        9.1

        7.4

        8.1

        7.5

        7.7

        7.9

        7.2

        4.5

        -43

        0.013

        Massachusetts

        120

        66

        7.2

        7.8

        6.6

        7.4

        7.0

        6.9

        6.7

        7.6

        5.6

        4.0

        -44

        0.017

        Abbreviation: NA = not applicable.

        * Per 100,000 population.

        Percentage change might not match calculations because of rounding.

        § P value from weighted least squares regression to assess linear trend significance during 2000–2009.

        The District of Columbia was excluded because of low death counts in all years; however District of Columbia deaths are included in the overall U.S. death rate.

        ** Significance determined using Z-test for states with ≥100 deaths and 95% confidence intervals from a gamma distribution for states with <100 deaths in 2009.

        †† With 17 deaths, rate for Vermont in 2009 was unstable and thus cannot be statistically compared with the overall U.S. death rate.

        §§ Death rates based on fewer than 20 deaths have been suppressed for unreliability.


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