Clinical and evolutionary aspects of home accidents in a Tunisian pediatric population
Keywords:
Accident, Enfant, Épidémiologie, PronosticAbstract
Home accidents are a global public health problem. They are responsible for high levels of morbidity and mortality in the pediatric population. In Tunisia, the extent of this problem remains poorly understood. The aim of this study was to determine the nature, prevalence and prognosis of home accidents in a Tunisian pediatric population. This was a monocentric, descriptive, retrospective study that collected cases of domestic accidents in children in the Pediatric Medicine Unit A of the Tunis Children's Hospital over a two-year period (2021-2022). Six hundred patients were hospitalized for domestic accidents, representing 6.83% of the department's activity. The sex ratio was 1.06. The mean age of the patients was 54 months ±42. The most common accidents were carbon monoxide poisoning (33%), drug poisoning (24.3%), foreign body inhalation/ingestion (10.3%), caustic ingestion (17.7%), pesticide poisoning (4.5%), and hydrocarbon poisoning (4.5%). The average length of hospital stay was 1.63 ± 1.6 days. The outcome was favorable in almost all cases (99.8%).Downloads
Published
2024-06-30
Issue
Section
Original Article
