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Accidents in the home to children under 5 in a multiracial population with a high level of social disadvantage were studied by interviewing at home the parents of 402 children attending the accident department of a west London hospital during one year. The parents' country of birth, whether they were employed, and their housing conditions were recorded using the definitions of the 1981 census. Four ethnic groups (British (183 children), Asian (127), Caribbean (61), and other (31)) were identified. Though attendance rates based on the populations of electoral wards at the census and standardised for distance from the hospital showed no significant differences among the ethnic groups, there was a strong gradient by social class and strong associations with unemployment of the mother (although not of the father), overcrowding, and tenure of housing. Social disadvantage seems to be more important than ethnicity as a determinant of accidents to children in the home.

Original publication

DOI

10.1136/bmj.296.6634.1450

Type

Journal article

Journal

British medical journal (Clinical research ed.)

Publication Date

05/1988

Volume

296

Pages

1450 - 1453

Addresses

Department of Community Medicine, University College London.

Keywords

Humans, Crowding, Housing, Accidents, Home, Social Class, Social Conditions, Child, Preschool, Ethnic Groups, Unemployment, London, Female, Male