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. 1966 Jan 29;94(5):228–234.

Accidental Deaths Among British Columbia Indians

N Schmitt, L W Hole, W S Barclay
PMCID: PMC1935264  PMID: 5902238

Abstract

A statistical and epidemiological review of British Columbia native Indian and non-Indian mortality revealed that accidents were the leading cause of death among Indians but ranked only fourth among non-Indians. Comparison of accidental death rates by age and sex showed that, without exception, the rates among Indians were considerably higher than the corressponding rates for non-Indians. While the Indians represented some 2% of the total population of British Columbia, they accounted for over 10% of the total accident fatalities, 29% of drownings, and 21% of fatal burns.

Socioeconomic, environmental and psychosocial factors and excessive drinking are considered the chief causes responsible for this rather unusual epidemiological phenomenon.

This study revealed certain hazardous conditions which are specific to the Indian's present way of life. In the authors' opinion the recognition of these specific hazards is imperative for the planning of effective preventive campaigns.

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Selected References

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

  1. SCHMITT N., BARCLAY W. S. Accidental deaths among West Coast Indians. Can J Public Health. 1962 Oct;53:409–412. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

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