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Headline
The Keeping Children Safe programme produced extensive new evidence on preventing falls, poisonings and thermal injuries in the under-fives, including that an injury prevention briefing did not increase the proportion of families with a fire escape plan, but did improve some secondary outcomes.
Abstract
Background:
Unintentional injuries among 0- to 4-year-olds are a major public health problem incurring substantial NHS, individual and societal costs. However, evidence on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of preventative interventions is lacking.
Aim:
To increase the evidence base for thermal injury, falls and poisoning prevention for the under-fives.
Methods:
Six work streams comprising five multicentre case–control studies assessing risk and protective factors, a study measuring quality of life and injury costs, national surveys of children’s centres, interviews with children’s centre staff and parents, a systematic review of barriers to, and facilitators of, prevention and systematic overviews, meta-analyses and decision analyses of home safety interventions. Evidence from these studies informed the design of an injury prevention briefing (IPB) for children’s centres for preventing fire-related injuries and implementation support (training and facilitation). This was evaluated by a three-arm cluster randomised controlled trial comparing IPB and support (IPB+), IPB only (no support) and usual care. The primary outcome was parent-reported possession of a fire escape plan. Evidence from all work streams subsequently informed the design of an IPB for preventing thermal injuries, falls and poisoning.
Results:
Modifiable risk factors for falls, poisoning and scalds were found. Most injured children and their families incurred small to moderate health-care and non-health-care costs, with a few incurring more substantial costs. Meta-analyses and decision analyses found that home safety interventions increased the use of smoke alarms and stair gates, promoted safe hot tap water temperatures, fire escape planning and storage of medicines and household products, and reduced baby walker use. Generally, more intensive interventions were the most effective, but these were not always the most cost-effective interventions. Children’s centre and parental barriers to, and facilitators of, injury prevention were identified. Children’s centres were interested in preventing injuries, and believed that they could prevent them, but few had an evidence-based strategic approach and they needed support to develop this. The IPB was implemented by children’s centres in both intervention arms, with greater implementation in the IPB+ arm. Compared with usual care, more IPB+ arm families received advice on key safety messages, and more families in each intervention arm attended fire safety sessions. The intervention did not increase the prevalence of fire escape plans [adjusted odds ratio (AOR) IPB only vs. usual care 0.93, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.58 to 1.49; AOR IPB+ vs. usual care 1.41, 95% CI 0.91 to 2.20] but did increase the proportion of families reporting more fire escape behaviours (AOR IPB only vs. usual care 2.56, 95% CI 1.38 to 4.76; AOR IPB+ vs. usual care 1.78, 95% CI 1.01 to 3.15). IPB-only families were less likely to report match play by children (AOR 0.27, 95% CI 0.08 to 0.94) and reported more bedtime fire safety routines (AOR for a 1-unit increase in the number of routines 1.59, 95% CI 1.09 to 2.31) than usual-care families. The IPB-only intervention was less costly and marginally more effective than usual care. The IPB+ intervention was more costly and marginally more effective than usual care.
Limitations:
Our case–control studies demonstrate associations between modifiable risk factors and injuries but not causality. Some injury cost estimates are imprecise because of small numbers. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses were limited by the quality of the included studies, the small numbers of studies reporting outcomes and significant heterogeneity, partly explained by differences in interventions. Network meta-analysis (NMA) categorised interventions more finely, but some variation remained. Decision analyses are likely to underestimate cost-effectiveness for a number of reasons. IPB implementation varied between children’s centres. Greater implementation may have resulted in changes in more fire safety behaviours.
Conclusions:
Our studies provide new evidence about the effectiveness of, as well as economic evaluation of, home safety interventions. Evidence-based resources for preventing thermal injuries, falls and scalds were developed. Providing such resources to children’s centres increases their injury prevention activity and some parental safety behaviours.
Future work:
Further randomised controlled trials, meta-analyses and NMAs are needed to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of home safety interventions. Further work is required to measure NHS, family and societal costs and utility decrements for childhood home injuries and to evaluate complex multicomponent interventions such as home safety schemes using a single analytical model.
Trial registration:
Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN65067450 and ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01452191.
Funding:
The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 5, No. 14. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
Contents
- Plain English summary
- Scientific summary
- Chapter 1. Introduction to the Keeping Children Safe programme of research
- Chapter 2. What are the associations between modifiable risk and protective factors and medically attended injuries resulting from five common injury mechanisms in children under the age of 5 years? (Work stream 1)
- Chapter 3. What are the NHS, child and family costs of falls, poisonings and scalds? (Work stream 2)
- Chapter 4. What injury prevention interventions are being undertaken by children’s centres to prevent thermal injuries, falls and poisonings? Children’s centres’ use of injury prevention interventions: two cross-sectional national surveys (work stream 3)
- Chapter 5. What are the barriers to, and facilitators of, implementing thermal injury, falls and poisoning prevention interventions among children’s centres, professionals and community members? (Work stream 4)
- Abstract
- Chapter summary
- Introduction
- Systematic review using quantitative and qualitative studies of barriers to, and facilitators of, implementing home safety interventions among families with young children (study E)
- Identifying barriers to, and facilitators of, injury prevention among children’s centre managers and staff (study F)
- Identifying barriers to, and facilitators of, injury prevention among parents and caregivers (study G)
- Discussion
- Chapter 6. How effective and cost-effective are a range of strategies for preventing falls, poisoning and scalds based on decision-analysis models incorporating data generated from research questions 1–3 and systematic reviews of the published literature? (Work stream 5)
- Chapter 7. Multicentre cluster randomised controlled trial evaluating implementation of a fire-prevention injury prevention briefing in children’s centres (work stream 6)
- Chapter 8. Patient and public involvement
- Study A (piloting of case–control questionnaires)
- Study B (validation of tools used to collect data)
- Study G (interview study of parents to identify barriers to, and facilitators of, injury prevention)
- Study M (interview study of parents in children’s centres about safety practices)
- Study M (randomised controlled trial of the injury prevention briefing)
- Chapter 9. Overall conclusion
- Chapter 10. Implications for practice
- Chapter 11. Recommendations for research
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1. Case–control questionnaires, home observation checklist for study B and summary of analyses using hospital controls for study A
- Appendix 2. Follow-up questionnaires and mini questionnaire, medical record data extraction form and unit cost tables for study C
- Appendix 3. The 2010 and 2012 questionnaires for study D
- Appendix 4. Search strategy for study E and interview guides for studies F and G
- Appendix 5. Search terms and strategies for studies H and I and base-case model inputs for the decision analyses for study K
- Appendix 6. Statistical appendix, interview schedules and questionnaires for study M, and injury prevention briefings
- List of abbreviations
About the Series
Article history
The research reported in this issue of the journal was funded by PGfAR as project number RP-PG-0407-10231. The contractual start date was in April 2009. The final report began editorial review in November 2014 and was accepted for publication in February 2016. As the funder, the PGfAR programme agreed the research questions and study designs in advance with the investigators. The authors have been wholly responsible for all data collection, analysis and interpretation, and for writing up their work. The PGfAR editors and production house have tried to ensure the accuracy of the authors’ report and would like to thank the reviewers for their constructive comments on the final report document. However, they do not accept liability for damages or losses arising from material published in this report.
Declared competing interests of authors
Elaine McColl is a subpanel member for the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research (PGfAR) journal, but in that capacity has already declared a conflict of interest in respect of this grant and has not been involved in any discussions or decisions thereon. Elaine McColl was a NIHR journal editor for the NIHR PGfAR journal at the time that this report was written and has a declared conflict of interest in respect of this report and will not participate in any discussions, work or decisions thereon. The Keeping Children Safe programme received Flexibility and Sustainability Funding from Nottinghamshire County Teaching Primary Care Trust, University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust and Norfolk and Suffolk Comprehensive Local Research Network and Research Capability Funding from Nottinghamshire County Teaching Primary Care Trust and Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust to support NIHR Faculty members’ salaries.
Last reviewed: November 2014; Accepted: February 2016.
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