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Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan Appendix Slides National Center for Health Statistics Centers for Disease Control and

Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan Appendix Slides

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Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan Appendix Slides. National Center for Health Statistics Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Injury and Violence Prevention. Ten Leading Causes of Death, Ages 15-24, 2010. 3,743. Source: WISQARS. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan

Appendix Slides

National Center for Health StatisticsCenters for Disease Control and Prevention

Page 2: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Injury and Violence Prevention

Page 3: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Ten Leading Causes of Death, Ages 15-24, 2010

Source: WISQARS

3,743

Cause of Death # Deaths 1 Unintentional injury 12,341 2 Homicide 4,678 3 Suicide 4,600 4 Malignant neoplasms 1,604 5 Heart disease 1,028 6 Congenital Anomalies 412 7 Cerebrovascular 190 8 Influenza & Pneumonia 181 9 Diabetes 165 10 Complicated Pregnancy 163

Page 4: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Leading Causes of Injury Deaths, 2010

SOURCE: National Vital Statistics System—Mortality (NVSS-M), CDC/NCHS.

Page 5: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Leading Causes of Nonfatal Injury, 2011 (treated + released)

SOURCE: National Electronic Injury Surveillance System–All Injury Program (NEISS–AIP), CDC/NCIPC, and Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)

Page 6: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Leading Causes of Nonfatal Injury, 2011 (hospitalized)

SOURCE: National Electronic Injury Surveillance System–All Injury Program (NEISS–AIP), CDC/NCIPC, and Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)

Page 7: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

SOURCE: National Electronic Injury Surveillance System–All Injury Program (NEISS–AIP), CDC/NCIPC, and Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)

Leading Causes of Nonfatal Injury, 2011

Page 8: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Total 9th grade 10th grade 11th grade 12th grade Female Male0

2

4

6

8

10

121999 2011Percent

Weapon Carrying by Adolescents by Grade and Sex, 1999 and 2011

NOTES: I = 95% confidence interval. Data are for the proportion of students in grades 9–12 who report carrying weapons on school property in the past 12 months. SOURCE: Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS), CDC/NCCDPHP.

Obj. IVP-36Decrease desired

HP2020 Target: 4.6

Page 9: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

2007 2008 2009 20100100200300400500600700800900

1,000

Rate per 100,000 (age adjusted)

Initial Emergency Department Visits for Nonfatal Traumatic Brain Injuries, 2007–2010

NOTES: I = 95% confidence interval. Data are for initial emergency department visits for nonfatal traumatic brain injuries (ICD-9-CM codes 800.0-801.9, 803.0–804.9, 850.0–854.1, 950.1–950.3, 995.55, 959.01 in any of the three diagnostic fields) among the injury ED subset (first listed ICD-9-CM 800–909.2, 909.4, 909.9–994.9, 995.50–995.59, 995.80–995.85, E800–E869, E880–E929, E950–E999) that were not admitted to the hospital or transferred to another facility. Data are age adjusted to the 2000 standard population.SOURCE: National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS), CDC/NCHS.

Obj. IVP-2.3Decrease desired

HP2020 Target: 365.3

Page 10: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

0-4 5–11 12–17 18–24 25–44 45–64 65+0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

3,000

3,500

2007 2008 2009 2010

Age (years)

Rate per 100,000

Initial Emergency Department Visits for Nonfatal Traumatic Brain Injuries by Age, 2007–

2010

NOTES: I = 95% confidence interval. Data are for initial emergency department visits for nonfatal traumatic brain injuries (ICD-9-CM codes 800.0-801.9, 803.0–804.9, 850.0–854.1, 950.1–950.3, 995.55, 959.01 in any of the three diagnostic fields) among the injury ED subset (first listed ICD-9-CM 800–909.2, 909.4, 909.9–994.9, 995.50–995.59, 995.80–995.85, E800–E869, E880–E929, E950–E999) that were not admitted to the hospital or transferred to another facility. SOURCE: National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS), CDC/NCHS.

Obj. IVP-2.3Decrease desired

Page 11: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20100

5

10

15

20Rate per 100,000

(age adjusted)

Unintentional Poisoning

Leading Cause of Injury Deaths, 1999–2010

Poisoning

Motor Vehicle Traffic

NOTES: Poisoning data are for ICD-10 codes X40-X49, X60-X69, X85-X90,Y10-Y19, Y35.2. Unintentional poisoning data are for ICD-10 codes X40-X49. Motor Vehicle Crash data are for ICD-10 codes V02-V04 (.1, .9), V09.2, V12-V14 (.3-.9), V19(.4-.6), V20-V28 (.3-.9), V29-V79 (.4-.9), V80 (.3-.5), V81.1, V82.1, V83-V86 (.0-.3), V87 (.0-.8), V89.2. Data are age adjusted to the 2000 standard population. SOURCE: National Vital Statistics System—Mortality (NVSS-M), CDC/NCHS.

2020 Target: 13.1

2020 Target: 12.4

Obj. IVP-13.1 and 9.1

Decrease desired

Page 12: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20100

5

10

15

20

25

30Rate per 100,000

Poisoning Deaths by Age Group, 1999–2010

55+ years

< 18 years

35–54 years

25–34 years

NOTES: Data are for ICD-10 codes X40–X49, X60–X69, X85–X90, Y10–Y19, Y35.2, and *U01(.6, .7) reported as underlying cause of death.SOURCE: National Vital Statistics System—Mortality (NVSS-M), CDC/NCHS.

18–24 years

Obj. IVP-9.1 and 9.2

Decrease desired

Page 13: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20100

5

10

15

20

25

30

35Rate per 100,000

Motor Vehicle Traffic Deaths by Age Group, 1999–2010

65+ years

< 18 years

45–64 years

25–44 years

18–24 years

NOTES: Data are for ICD-10 codes V02–V04 (.1, .9), V09.2, V12–V14 (.3–.9), V19(.4–.6), V20–V28 (.3–.9), V29–V79 (.4–.9), V80 (.3–.5),V81.1, V82.1, V83–V86 (.0–.3), V87 (.0–.8), and V89.2 reported as underlying cause of death.SOURCE: National Vital Statistics System—Mortality (NVSS-M), CDC/NCHS.

Obj. IVP-13.1Decrease desired

Page 14: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

1.9

4.8 5.8

3.0

5.6

3.7

9.08.16.9

5.9

2.8

1.9

2.11.5

4.1

3.5

2.9

1.6

6.3

7.7

6.7

6.6

7.4

4.5

5.1

4.85.2

10.2

12.4

2.3

7.5

4.78.3

1.4

4.3

3.8 2.7

States in shades of green have met the 2020 target of 5.5 homicides per 100,000

Per 100,000

1.4 - 3.03.1 - 5.55.6 - 8.38.4 – 20.8

2.8

3.7

2.1

2.96.7

5.6

5.17.4

6.9

6.3

6.620.8

Obj. IVP-29Decrease desired

2.8

1.9

Homicides by State, 2008–2010

NOTES: Data are for ICD-10 codes *U01-*U02, X85-Y09, Y87.1 reported as underlying cause of death and are age adjusted to the 2000 standard population.SOURCE: National Vital Statistics System—Mortality (NVSS-M), CDC/NCHS.

Page 15: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20100

5

10

15

20

25

6 5.3

Rate per 100,000 (age adjusted)

Homicides, 1999–2010

NOTES: Data are for ICD-10 codes *U01-*U02, X85-Y09, Y87.1 reported as underlying cause of death and are age adjusted to the 2000 standard population.SOURCE: National Vital Statistics System—Mortality (NVSS-M), CDC/NCHS.

HP2020 Target: 5.5

HP2020 Baseline: 6.1

Obj. IVP-29Decrease desired

Page 16: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20100

5

10

15

20

25

Rate per 100,000 (age adjusted)

Homicides by Sex, 1999–2010

Total

Female

Male

HP2020 Target: 5.5

NOTES: Data are for ICD-10 codes *U01-*U02, X85-Y09, Y87.1 reported as underlying cause of death and are age adjusted to the 2000 standard population.SOURCE: National Vital Statistics System—Mortality (NVSS-M), CDC/NCHS.

Obj. IVP-29Decrease desired

Page 17: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20100

5

10

15

20

25Rate per 100,000

Homicides by Age Group, 1999–2010

65+ years< 18 years

45–64 years

25–44 years

18–24 years

NOTES: Data are for ICD-10 codes *U01-*U02, X85-Y09, Y87.1 reported as underlying cause of death.SOURCE: National Vital Statistics System—Mortality (NVSS-M), CDC/NCHS.

Obj. IVP-29Decrease desired

Page 18: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20100

5

10

15

20

25

Rate per 100,000 (age adjusted)

Homicides by Race/Ethnicity, 1999–2010

HP2020 Target: 5.5

NOTES: Data are for ICD-10 codes *U01-*U02, X85-Y09, Y87.1 reported as underlying cause of death and are age adjusted to the 2000 standard population. Multiple-race data were reported by some states; multiple-race data were bridged to the single-race categories for comparability. Persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race. SOURCE: National Vital Statistics System—Mortality (NVSS-M), CDC/NCHS.

Black, non-Hispanic

Asian or Pacific Islander

Total

Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native

White, non-Hispanic

Obj. IVP-29Decrease desired

Page 19: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Self-Reports of Violence(Teen Dating Violence)

1 in 5 female and 1 in 7 male victims of intimate partner violence (IPV)* reported that they first experienced some form of IPV between the ages of 11 and 17

* Rape, physical violence, or stalking by an intimate partner

SOURCE: National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS), CDC/NCIPC.

Page 20: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Occupational Safety and Health

Page 21: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Contact With Objects and Equipment

Falls Bodily Reac-tion and Exer-

tion

Exposure to Harmful Sub-

stances or Environments

Transporta-tion Accidents

Fires and Explosions

Assaults and Violent Acts

0100,000200,000300,000400,000500,000600,000700,000800,000900,000

1,000,000Number

Injuries Treated in Emergency Departments by Event or Exposure, 2009

NOTES: I = 95% confidence interval.SOURCES: Current Population Survey (CPS), Census and DOL/BLS; National Electronic Injury Surveillance System -- Work Supplement (NEISS-WORK), CDC/NIOSH and CPSC

Obj. OSH-2.2Decrease desired

Event or Exposure

Page 22: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Total Female Male 15-17 18-19 0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

82007

Age (years)

Rate per 100 full-time workers

HP2020 Target: 4.9

Emergency Department Visits Work-related Illness and Injuries among Adolescents by Sex and Age, 2007 and 2009

NOTES: I = 95% confidence interval. Data are for emergency department treated injuries and illnesses among workers aged 15 to 19 years.SOURCES: Current Population Survey (CPS), Census and DOL/BLS; National Electronic Injury Surveillance System -- Work Supplement (NEISS-WORK), CDC/NIOSH and CPSC

Obj. OSH-2.3Decrease desired

Page 23: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Total Female Male White Black His-panic

Asian Other 0

100

200

300

400

500

600

7002007Number

HP2020 Target: 565

Work-related Homicides by Sex and Race/Ethnicity, 2007 and 2010

NOTES: Asian includes Pacific Islander. The categories black and white exclude persons of Hispanic origin. Persons of Hispanic origin may be any race. SOURCE: Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries (CFOI), DOL/BLS.

Obj. OSH-5Decrease desired

Race/Ethnicity

Page 24: Healthy People 2020 Progress Review: Violence Across the Lifespan  Appendix Slides

Total 1 to 10 11 to 49 50 to 249 250 to 999 1,000+0

20

40

60

80

100Percent

No Worksite Violence Prevention Program by Establishment Size, 2005

SOURCE: Survey of Workplace Violence Prevention, DOL/BLS.

Size of Establishment