The Western Australian Road Injury Database (1987-1996): ten years of linked police, hospital and death records of road crashes and injuries

Authors
Citation
Dl. Rosman, The Western Australian Road Injury Database (1987-1996): ten years of linked police, hospital and death records of road crashes and injuries, ACC ANAL PR, 33(1), 2001, pp. 81-88
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science
Journal title
ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION
ISSN journal
00014575 → ACNP
Volume
33
Issue
1
Year of publication
2001
Pages
81 - 88
Database
ISI
SICI code
0001-4575(200101)33:1<81:TWARID>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
Accurate information about injuries and their causes is essential to road s afety research, policy development and evaluation. Such information is most powerful when it is available for all road crashes within a jurisdiction. The Western Australian Road Injury Database achieves this through the on-go ing linkage of crash details from reports to police with the details of inj uries to casualties contained in hospital and death records. Over the 10-ye ar period 1987-1996, 386 132 road crashes involving 142 308 casualties were reported to the police in Western Australia. There were also 47 757 hospit al discharge records and 2906 death records related to road crashes during this period. Of the 142 308 police casualties, 17 848 had a matching hospit al discharge record and 2454 had a matching death registration. Linkage wit hin the hospital records revealed that the 47 757 discharge records involve d 43 179 individuals, of whom 39 073 were admitted to hospital once, 3653 w ere admitted twice, 374 were admitted three times and 78 were admitted more than three times. Of the 43 179 hospitalised casualties, 817 had a matchin g death record. Linked police, hospital and death records of road crash cas ualties provide accurate outcome information for casualties in crashes repo rted to the police. In addition, estimates of under reporting of crashes fo r different road user groups can be made by comparing hospital records with and without a matching police record. This article demonstrates the power of a linked system to answer complex research questions related to outcome and under-reporting. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.