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Paediatric Emergency Injury Presentations During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Regional Victoria, Australia: A Silver Lining?
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Background/Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic caused a widespread shift to remote work, significantly altering child supervision. In Australia, prolonged lockdowns created unique conditions where many parents were working from home while simultaneously caring for children. This study aimed to investigate potential changes in the epidemiology of paediatric injury-related presentations to emergency health services among children in Southwest Victoria, Australia, during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted using deidentified emergency presentation data from ten health services in regional Victoria for children aged 0–14 years between 2018 and 2023. Injury data were analysed across three timeframes (Pre-COVID, COVID, Post-COVID). Chi-squared tests assessed differences in injury presentations by age, gender, and service type. Significance was determined at p < 0.05. Results: A total of 21,072 child injury-related presentations occurred. Males accounted for 57.6% of presentations, with the 10–14 age group comprising 39.8% of cases. During lockdown, injury presentations increased among 0–4-year-old females (from 30.2% to 32.0%), likely reflecting reduced supervision as parents juggled work-from-home responsibilities. Conversely, rates declined among older children, particularly 10–14-year-olds, potentially due to reduced participation in sports and outdoor activities. More than half of all cases (59.1%) were presented to Victorian Emergency Minimum Dataset (VEMD)-reporting emergency departments. Conclusions: The shift to working from home during the pandemic had a measurable impact on childhood injury patterns, particularly among younger children. These findings highlight the importance of considering parental work and childcare arrangements in injury prevention strategies and highlight the benefits of additional regional data to provide a more accurate picture of regional health service use.
Title: Paediatric Emergency Injury Presentations During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Regional Victoria, Australia: A Silver Lining?
Description:
Background/Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic caused a widespread shift to remote work, significantly altering child supervision.
In Australia, prolonged lockdowns created unique conditions where many parents were working from home while simultaneously caring for children.
This study aimed to investigate potential changes in the epidemiology of paediatric injury-related presentations to emergency health services among children in Southwest Victoria, Australia, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods: A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted using deidentified emergency presentation data from ten health services in regional Victoria for children aged 0–14 years between 2018 and 2023.
Injury data were analysed across three timeframes (Pre-COVID, COVID, Post-COVID).
Chi-squared tests assessed differences in injury presentations by age, gender, and service type.
Significance was determined at p < 0.
05.
Results: A total of 21,072 child injury-related presentations occurred.
Males accounted for 57.
6% of presentations, with the 10–14 age group comprising 39.
8% of cases.
During lockdown, injury presentations increased among 0–4-year-old females (from 30.
2% to 32.
0%), likely reflecting reduced supervision as parents juggled work-from-home responsibilities.
Conversely, rates declined among older children, particularly 10–14-year-olds, potentially due to reduced participation in sports and outdoor activities.
More than half of all cases (59.
1%) were presented to Victorian Emergency Minimum Dataset (VEMD)-reporting emergency departments.
Conclusions: The shift to working from home during the pandemic had a measurable impact on childhood injury patterns, particularly among younger children.
These findings highlight the importance of considering parental work and childcare arrangements in injury prevention strategies and highlight the benefits of additional regional data to provide a more accurate picture of regional health service use.
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