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Injury epidemiology after the 2001 Gujarat earthquake in India: a retrospective analysis of injuries treated at a rural hospital in the Kutch district immediately after the disaster

TLDR
The Injury epidemiology reported in this study is in general agreement with most other studies reporting injury epidemiology except higher incidence of distal orthopedic injuries particularly to the lower extremities, and it is found that young males were more prone to sustaining injuries.
Abstract
Background: The number of injured far exceeds those dead and the average injury to mortality ratio in earthquakes stands at 3:1. Immediate effective medical response significantly influences injury outcomes and thus the overall health impact of earthquakes. Inadequate or mismanagement of injuries may lead to disabilities. The lack of precise data from immediate aftermath is seen as a remarkable weak point in disaster epidemiology and warrants evidence generation. Objective: To analyze the epidemiology of injuries and the treatment imparted at a secondary rural hospital in the Kutch district, Gujarat, India following the January 26, 2001 earthquake. Design/Methods: Discharge reports of patients admitted to the hospital over 10 weeks were analyzed retrospectively for earthquake-related injuries. Results: Orthopedic injuries, (particularly fractures of the lower limbs) were predominant and serious injuries like head, chest, abdominal, and crush syndrome were minimal. Wound infections were reported in almost 20% of the admitted cases. Surgical procedures were more common than conservative treatment. The most frequently performed surgical procedures were open reduction with internal fixation and cleaning and debridement of contaminated wounds. Four secondary deaths and 102 transfers to tertiary care due to complications were reported. Conclusion: The injury epidemiology reported in this study is in general agreement with most other studies reporting injury epidemiology except higher incidence of distal orthopedic injuries particularly to the lower extremities. We also found that young males were more prone to sustaining injuries. These results warrant further research. Inconsistent data reporting procedures against the backdrop of inherent disaster data incompleteness calls for urgent standardization of reporting earthquake injuries for evidence-based response policy planning. Keywords: disaster; earthquake; injury; epidemiology; data; standardization (Published: 25 July 2011) Citation: Global Health Action 2011, 4 : 7196 - DOI: 10.3402/gha.v4i0.7196 This paper is part of the Cluster Health and health systems impact of natural disasters - more papers from this cluster can be found here .

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology of Traumatic Injuries from Earthquakes

TL;DR: Epidemiologic methods and methods used in various population-based epidemiologic studies are highlighted, with a promising approach to account for this variability in earthquakes and to identify potential avenues for preparedness and mitigation.
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The threat of communicable diseases following natural disasters: a public health response.

TL;DR: Some of the major issues relevant to preparedness and response for natural disasters are presented.
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Morbidity and mortality of hospitalized patients after the 1995 Hanshin-Awaji earthquake.

TL;DR: Morbidity as well as mortality rates increased with age in patients with both injuries and illnesses during the Hanshin-Awaji earthquake, underscores the need for adequate disaster response in such an urban situation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long Term Mortality and Morbidity Related to Degree of Damage Following the 1988 Earthquake in Armenia

TL;DR: There were more morbidity cases of heart disease hypertension arthritis and diabetes within the first 6 months after the earthquake and those with loss scores of 1 2 and 3 and controls for confounders showed a significant dose response relationship with chronic heart conditions and to hypertensionthritis and diabetes compared to controls.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seismic, structural, and individual factors associated with earthquake related injury

TL;DR: It was found that individual, building, and seismic characteristics were independently predictive of increased injury risk and prevention and preparedness efforts should focus on each as potential points of intervention.
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