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American Journal of Public Health logoLink to American Journal of Public Health
. 1987 Jul;77(7):810–812. doi: 10.2105/ajph.77.7.810

Head injury with and without hospital admission: comparisons of incidence and short-term disability.

D Fife
PMCID: PMC1647221  PMID: 2954475

Abstract

All persons with head injuries (skull fracture or injury to the cranial contents resulting in a physician visit or at least one day of disability), regardless of treatment or hospital admission status, were identified from National Health Interview Survey data for the years 1977-81. Among those who reported such head injuries within the two weeks prior to interview, only 16 per cent were admitted to hospitals. Children, members of low-income families, and those injured at home, school, or in a recreational setting were less likely to be admitted to hospital than others. Among those who sustained a head injury in the previous three months and had some disability from that injury during the two weeks prior to interview, those not admitted to hospital included one-half of those with three to seven days of bed disability and one-third of those with more than seven days of bed disability; and they accounted for one-half of all disability days. These findings indicate that hospital-based head injury incidence data are incomplete and may contain substantial biases.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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