Ba. Woodruff et Rc. Baron, A DESCRIPTION OF NONFATAL SPINAL-CORD INJURY USING A HOSPITAL-BASED REGISTRY, American journal of preventive medicine, 10(1), 1994, pp. 10-14
To formulate an epidemiologic description of West Virginia spinal cord
injury (SCI) resulting in hospitalization, we used data collected dur
ing the West Virginia Spinal Cord Injury Registry's first three years
of operation, July 1985 through June 1988, supplemented by data from r
egistries in neighboring states. The West Virginia registry was establ
ished to detect newly injured persons potentially in need of rehabilit
ation services. Because reporting is hospital based, the registry reco
rds only injured patients surviving until hospitalization. The overall
incidence of hospitalized SCI patients was 25 per million per year; t
he sex-specific rate among men was 4.6 times the rate among women. Age
-specific rates peaked in the 15-24 years age group and declined with
increasing age. Motor vehicle crashes accounted for 69% of all hospita
lized SCI; falls, for 21%; and sports, falling objects, and violence,
for less than 10% each. Most cause-specific incidence rates were highe
st for young males; however, falls were more common for the elderly. A
t least 25% of victims used drugs or alcohol shortly before injury, an
d none injured in auto or truck crashes reported wearing seat belts. Q
uadriplegia resulted for 56% of recorded SCI patients, whereas paraple
gia resulted for the remaining 44%. SCI was more common in the summer
months, on weekends, and during late afternoon hours. Both neurologic
deficit and time of occurrence varied by cause. Although limitations e
xist, registry data has proved useful in describing spinal cord injury
in West Virginia and has potential public health use in guiding preve
ntion programs.