MyData:What Is MyData? | Login/Account Info | Download Saved Files | Logout Description & Citation--Study No. 4598 | | | ICPSR Study No.: | 4598 |
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Persistent URL:
| http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR04598 |
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| | | Title: | National Electronic Injury Surveillance System All Injury Program, 2004 |
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| | | Principal Investigator(s): | United States Department of Health and Human Services. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control |
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| United States Consumer Product Safety Commission |
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| | | Series: | National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) Series |
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| | | Funding Agency: | United States Department of Health and Human Services. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control |
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| | | Bibliographic Citation: | U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, and United States Consumer Product Safety Commission. NATIONAL ELECTRONIC INJURY SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM ALL INJURY PROGRAM, 2004 [Computer file]. ICPSR04598-v1. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control [producer], 2006. Ann Arbor MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2006-11-21. doi:10.3886/ICPSR04598 |
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| | | | Summary: | Beginning in July 2000, the National Center for Injury
Prevention and Control (NCIPC), and Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), in collaboration with the United States Consumer
Product Safety Commission (CPSC), expanded the National Electronic
Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) to collect data on all types and
causes of injuries treated in a representative sample of United States
hospitals with emergency departments (ED). This system is called the
NEISS All Injury Program (NEISS AIP). The NEISS AIP is designed to
provide national incidence estimates of all types and external causes
of nonfatal injuries and poisonings treated in United States hospital
EDs. Data on injury-related visits are being obtained from a national
sample of 66 out of 100 NEISS hospitals that were selected as a
stratified probability sample of hospitals in the United States and
its territories with a minimum of six beds and a 24-hour ED. The
sample includes separate strata for very large, large, medium, and
small hospitals, defined by the number of annual ED visits per
hospital, and children's hospitals. The scope of reporting goes beyond
routine reporting of injuries associated with consumer-related
products in CPSC's jurisdiction to include all injuries and
poisonings. The data can be used to (1) measure the magnitude and
distribution of nonfatal injuries in the United States, (2) monitor
unintentional and violence-related nonfatal injuries over time, (3)
identify emerging injury problems, (4) identify specific cases for
follow-up investigations of particular injury-related problems, and
(5) set national priorities. A fundamental principle of this expansion
effort is that preliminary surveillance data will be made available in
a timely manner to a number of different federal agencies with unique
and overlapping public health responsibilities and concerns. Also,
annually, the final edited data are released as public use data files
for use by other public health professionals and researchers. These
public use data files provide NEISS AIP data on nonfatal injuries
collected from July through December 2000 (ICPSR 3582), from January
through December 2001 (ICPSR 3817), from January through December 2002
(ICPSR 4085), from January through December 2003 (ICPSR 4352), and
from January through December 2004 (ICPSR 4598). Variables in the
datasets include body part affected by injury, diagnosis, case
disposition, fire involvement, immediate cause of injury, injury as
determined by the CDC, intent of injury, intent with sexual/other
assault, locales where injured, precipitating cause of injury,
perpetrator to victim relationship in assault, reason for assault,
whether injury was sports-related or traffic-related, whether it was a
violent injury, and date of injury. Demographic information specifies
race, sex, and age of patient. |
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| | | Subject Term(s): | accidents, medical care, nonfatal injuries, poisoning, product safety, public health, public safety |
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| | | Geographic Coverage: | United States |
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| | | Time Period: | January 2004 - December 2004 |
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| | | Date(s) of Collection: | January 2004 - December 2004 |
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| | | Universe: | United States hospitals providing emergency services. |
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| | | Data Type: | administrative records data |
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| | | | Sample: | Data were collected from a national sample of 66 out of
100 NEISS hospitals that were selected as a stratified probability
sample of United States hospitals with at least six beds that provided
24-hour emergency service excluding psychiatric and penal
institutions. The sample included five strata of which four
represented different levels of hospital size, measured by the number
of emergency department visits. The fifth contained the children's
hospitals. There were 31 hospitals in the small stratum, 9 hospitals
in the medium stratum, 6 hospitals in the large stratum, 15 hospitals
in the very large stratum, and 5 hospitals in the children's stratum. |
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| | | Data Source: | medical records |
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| | | | Note: | A list of the data formats available for this study can be found in the
summary of holdings. Detailed file-level information (such as record length, case count, and variable count) is listed in the
file manifest. |
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| | | Original ICPSR Release: | 2006-11-21 |
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| | | Dataset(s): | - DS1: National Electronic Injury Surveillance System All Injury Program, 2004
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