Scandinavian journal of social medicine
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The paper focuses on how mortality due to injuries among Norwegian children has varied over time and throughout the country over the last two decades. The temporal trends are compared to those of the other Nordic countries. Individual data on date of birth and death, county of residence at death, sex and cause of death were obtained from the Norwegian Death Registry on all children aged 0-14 who died during the time-span 1971-1989. ⋯ The regional variation was strongest for drowning and showed a different profile from the overall pattern for bicyclists, passengers and falling injuries. The incidence of fatal injuries in Norway is comparable to those of Denmark, Finland and Iceland, but considerably higher than in Sweden. In all Nordic countries the rates have declined to about one third from 1971 to 1988.
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All stillbirths in 1985 and 1986 in three Danish counties were assessed in a perinatal audit. The aim was to investigate if departure from generally accepted standards of satisfactory perinatal care might have contributed to stillbirths, and also to investigate if differences in the structure of antenatal care and the delivery systems might have any influence on the rate of stillbirths. 119 cases evaluated, 70 were classified as unavoidable deaths, in 48 cases a different treatment might have improved the infant's possibility of survival and in one case consensus was not reached. ⋯ Directives for visitation between surgical and obstetric departments were essential to the rate of stillbirth. The results indicate that it might be possible to achieve a further decrease in the number of stillbirths by intensifying the postgraduate training of the professionals and by issuing guidelines for the sharing of care responsibilities.
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A phenomenon of great concern in several Western countries is the number of patients with non-urgent ailments attending the often overloaded hospital emergency departments (EDs). With a view to providing these patients with more appropriate care, they were, in a trial at Huddinge Hospital, Sweden, advised and directed to other care facilities by a specially trained nurse. A survey indicated that 84% of the patients who agreed to a referral followed the advice given. ⋯ Moreover, the former were more likely to have a positive general attitude towards the ED. There was a positive relationship between improvement of presenting symptom and satisfaction with care at the ED, and between satisfaction and favourable attitude towards the ED. However, although patients were willing to engage in a primary health care oriented behaviour, they did not report improvement to the same extent as did ED treated patients and their general attitude towards primary health care facilities was not more favourable, at least not within a few weeks after referral.
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In the catchment area of Helsinki University Central Hospital (in total 16 surgical hospitals) amputation was performed on 9 patients with frostbite in the upper extremities during 1984-1985. The population during the study period in this area was 1.165,000 inhabitants, corresponding to 24% of the whole population in Finland. All 9 patients were male and the mean age was 49 years (range 31-75). ⋯ Two patients were chronic schizophrenics showing no signs of alcohol abuse, but the remaining 7 were either acutely or chronically alcohol intoxicated: 5 patients were chronic alcoholics, one was an alcohol abuser without a definite diagnosis of alcoholism, and one patient with no previous history of alcohol abuse was alcohol intoxicated. Based on the present study it is clear that, in addition to the cold winters in Finland, other factors contribute to severe frostbite. These include many psychosocial factors such as alcoholism or mental disease, unbalanced marital status, occupation handicap and lack of regular residence.