PMID: 9194255Jun 1, 1997Paper

Spinal cord injuries in Arkansas due to violence: 1980-1989

Spinal Cord
C M Carroll

Abstract

In some areas of the US the incidence of violence-related spinal cord injuries (SCIs) is double or triple that of 10 years ago. The purpose of this study was to determine if this trend is evident in Arkansas, a small rural state. For the study period 15.3% of traumatic SCIs identified in Arkansas were violence-related. The overall incidence rate of traumatic SCIs in Arkansas declined from 41.11 per million in 1980 to 33.18 per million in 1989. However, the rate of violence-related SCIs rose from 3.5 per million in 1980 to 5.14 in 1989. The incidence of violence-related SCIs in Arkansas did not increase dramatically during the 1980s. However, the incidence of women with violence-related SCIs nearly tripled. With the dramatic rise in violence-related SCIs in women and the decrease in violence-related SCIs in men, the gender gap has been virtually eliminated in violence-related SCIs.

Citations

Jun 18, 2002·Accident; Analysis and Prevention·Peter O'Connor
Sep 19, 2003·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·M Cristina PagliacciUNKNOWN Gruppo Italiano Studio Epidemiologico Mielolesioni
Apr 6, 2001·Injury Prevention : Journal of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention·P O'Connor
Nov 24, 1999·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·A I NobunagaR B Karunas
Jun 22, 2014·European Spine Journal : Official Publication of the European Spine Society, the European Spinal Deformity Society, and the European Section of the Cervical Spine Research Society·Seyed Behzad JazayeriVafa Rahimi-Movaghar
Oct 22, 2003·Spinal Cord·M C PagliacciUNKNOWN Gruppo Italiano Studio Epidemiologico Mielolesioni (GISEM) Group
Mar 28, 2018·Traffic Injury Prevention·Joseph O'NeilJudith Talty

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