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Implementing the national priorities for injury surveillance

Rebecca J Mitchell, Rod J McClure, Ann M Williamson and Kirsten McKenzie
Med J Aust 2008; 188 (7): 405-408. || doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2008.tb01685.x
Published online: 7 April 2008

Decreasing the global burden of injuries is one of the main challenges for public health in the 21st century.1 In Australia, injuries account each year for around 370 000 hospital admissions and 7900 deaths, and cost the health system around $4.1 billion.2,3 Injury is the leading cause of death in Australia for individuals aged 1 to 44 years.4 Unintentional injuries rank third highest across all health outcomes for years of life lost, fifth highest in terms of incidence and total mortality, and sixth highest for disability-adjusted life years.5 Most importantly, all these injuries are potentially preventable.

Information about public health expenditure on injury prevention is difficult to obtain, but available data indicate that this expenditure is disproportionate to the magnitude of the problem. For example, in 2004–05, national expenditure on health promotion activities for injury prevention, nutrition, physical activity and sun protection combined represented only 8.6% of government public health expenditure6 (and only 0.1% of total government health expenditure7). Furthermore, unintentional injury received only 1.9% of total National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) funding during 2002–03.5 The gap between the size of the public health problem of injury and national efforts to reduce it needs to be addressed.

Successful injury prevention rests on a foundation of quality surveillance data. Australia has a relatively advanced system of injury surveillance compared with many other high-income countries; this includes the recently established National Coroners Information System (NCIS), state-based trauma registries and external-cause data collected nationally for hospital admissions. However, aspects of Australia’s injury surveillance could be improved. The current National Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion Plan8 includes recommendations on injury surveillance, yet most remain to be implemented.

Here, we describe some of the actions needed to implement this plan, as well as other opportunities to enhance injury surveillance in Australia. We also discuss barriers to implementation and how they might be overcome.

Injury surveillance

Injury surveillance has been defined as “the ongoing, systematic collection, analysis and interpretation of [injury] data essential to the planning, implementation, and evaluation of [intervention strategies], closely integrated with the timely dissemination of these data to those who need to know . . . and the application of these data to prevention and control”.9 Injury surveillance systems are needed to estimate the community burden of injury; to monitor injury trends over time; to detect clusters of injury events by time, person and place; to prioritise strategies for injury prevention; to evaluate injury-prevention strategies; to set directions for injury-prevention research; and to inform the development of injury prevention policies.10-13 Optimal injury surveillance systems have the capacity to identify what injuries occurred, where, to whom, when and why.

The health sector and national injury policy and surveillance

During the past 20 years, the health sector has played a major role in developing injury policy in Australia,14 culminating in the National Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion Plan, which covers the decade 2004–2014.8 Recommendations on injury surveillance have been integral to most of these policies and plans (Box 1). However, of the 22 recommendations relevant to injury surveillance included in Australian health policies since 1986, only three have been completely implemented, and the recommendations in the current plan are yet to be completed.

Priorities for injury surveillance

To further develop national capacity for injury surveillance and to promote further innovation in this surveillance, some key initiatives need to be implemented. These group into four themes (Box 2):

One of the most immediate areas for action is to enhance the value of existing surveillance systems by improving the data collected. Easily implemented strategies include the addition of unique identifiers for patients or for the injury (eg, date or time that it occurred), better characterisation of the person injured (eg, Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander status), reduced use of “dump” codes such as “other” and “unspecified”, and improved collection of details of the circumstances of the injury through the inclusion of narrative text. National implementation of a police notification of death form would also improve comparability and consistency of information on injury mortality around the country. This form has been adopted in all Australian jurisdictions except New South Wales, Victoria, and Western Australia. The police and attorney-general’s departments in these states should be encouraged to allocate resources for its implementation.

Currently, injury surveillance in Australia is limited almost entirely to tracking fatalities and serious acute injuries. While this produces valuable information, it means policy and practice decisions are restricted to these relatively rare events with almost immediate injury outcomes. We need to expand the scope of injury surveillance to encompass data from emergency departments, thereby including less serious and less acute injuries. The argument is similar for ensuring that injury surveillance is truly national, reflecting urban, regional, and even the most remote areas. In fact, a high and continuing priority for injury surveillance is ensuring that the collected data accurately describe the profile of injury, with no gaps in surveillance. Otherwise, prevention initiatives and resources may be misdirected. The validity of national injury data collections should be assessed to determine their accuracy for identifying national priorities. The agencies responsible for these data collections should receive resources for this assessment, and Australian injury research centres should assist in the evaluation process.

Key medium-term initiatives should involve activities to ensure the availability and most effective use of injury surveillance data. For example, the United States has developed the National Violent Death Reporting System to improve the accessibility of information on violent deaths by incorporating data from a variety of injury collections.29 There is no reason that a similar system of surveillance, in the form of a data warehouse, could not be implemented in Australia for injury-related mortality and morbidity data collections. This would require a national body, such as the Australian Bureau of Statistics, or a consortium to coordinate the data warehouse, and the development of partnerships and cooperative agreements between agencies on data access.

Lastly, ongoing improvements in injury surveillance rely on the work of clinical coders. Currently, there are question marks over the accuracy of coding of particular variables (eg, activity and location of incident). Comprehensive training for clinical coders regarding external causes would help improve the accuracy of injury information. An assessment of data quality in health data collections would help identify areas where further coding training is required. Organisations such as the National Centre for Classification in Health should be resourced to develop a training module for clinical coders, and national and state health departments should be encouraged to support this action. In addition, further investment in the continued development of a trained workforce that can undertake injury surveillance work should be fostered.

Barriers to implementation

The actions related to injury surveillance in the National Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion Plan are unlikely to be achieved without an implementation plan, a performance management structure, sufficient resources and an appropriate national governance structure for the plan.14 These do not exist, and their absence is the only substantial barrier to advancing injury surveillance. The usually cited barriers to implementation (lack of financial resources and personnel time, and public concerns over privacy) are relative rather than absolute barriers and could be easily overcome if the government showed its commitment by addressing the above issues.

Conclusion

Information from routine data collections is widely used by national and state governments in Australia to formulate and evaluate public health policies and to allocate resources to areas deemed a high priority. High-quality injury surveillance data are essential to ensure the appropriateness of these policies. Thus, it is important to ensure that injury policy in Australia supports the development and progress of innovative injury surveillance capabilities. There is a substantial gap between the importance of the problem and the commitment of funds to support the implementation of recommended enhancements to injury surveillance systems in this country.

Australia has had a world first with the development of the NCIS, and some Australian states have been world leaders in surveillance initiatives (eg, WA and data linkage,30 and NSW and data text mining practices31). Implementation of the national priorities for injury surveillance that were identified in the most recent injury policy is paramount. For Australia to remain at the cutting edge of injury surveillance, we need to ensure that innovative surveillance practices are able to continue. What are we waiting for?

1 Australian health policy recommendations on injury surveillance, 1986–2005

Public health policy and injury surveillance recommendations

Status*


1986. Looking forward to better health15

Establish injury surveillance systems, collect and analyse data on injury, and conduct injury prevention projects

In progress


1988. Health for all Australians16

Develop a technical support group in each state to provide local input to state surveillance and prevention programs, and to support local government and neighbourhood initiatives

Not conducted


1993. Goals and targets for Australia’s health in the year 2000 and beyond17

Not applicable


1994. Better health outcomes for Australians18

Implement a “place of activity” code for routine hospital morbidity data collections and for coronial data recording systems so that work-related and sport-related injury can be identified

Completed

Develop a reliable indicator for identifying consumer product-related injury and death in hospital morbidity and coronial systems, respectively

Not conducted

Improve injury surveillance systems, including mechanism of injury coding, to ensure that they support the identification of injury patterns associated with consumer products

Not conducted

Investigate developing uniform protocols for data collection by police attending the scene of drownings in each state and territory

In progress

Support the introduction of the National Minimum Data Set for Injury Surveillance in mortality and morbidity data collections

In progress

Introduce a national electronic data collection system for coronial data

Completed

Develop and introduce a national trauma care information system

Not conducted


1997. National Health Priority Area: injury prevention and control19

Advance injury data collection systems by:

In progress

Completed

Not conducted

In progress

Not conducted


2001. National Injury Prevention Plan: priorities for 2001–200320

Ensure statistical systems are adequate to provide necessary data for each of the four priority areas

In progress

Continue to enhance data collection, current injury surveillance systems, such as those managed by the states and territories, emergency departments, and sports injury collection systems

In progress


2005. National Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion Plan: 2004–20148

Enable access to quality data and its analysis

To be completed

Focus attention on rural and remote issues in the development of injury data collection systems that will provide detailed data on injury types and severity and the identification of high-risk groups

To be completed

Provide greater access to information and data that will aid the planning of injury prevention and safety promotion for rural and remote communities

To be completed

Improve injury surveillance systems and other sources of quantitative and qualitative data, to provide adequate information for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander injury prevention and safety promotion

To be completed

Support the development and maintenance of information on alcohol involvement in serious injuries

To be completed

Gaps to be resolved: quality of, access to, and dissemination of injury data

To be completed


* In progress = work is ongoing to implement the recommendation. To be completed = recommendations within the current plan where work is ongoing or has not begun.

2 Key initiatives needed to improve injury surveillance in Australia

Filling the gaps: core data elements and uniform data collection

Injury surveillance performance and gaps in surveillance

Data accessibility and system integration

Workforce development and knowledge dissemination

  • Rebecca J Mitchell1
  • Rod J McClure2
  • Ann M Williamson1
  • Kirsten McKenzie3

  • 1 NSW Injury Risk Management Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW.
  • 2 Accident Research Centre, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC.
  • 3 National Centre for Classification in Health, Brisbane, QLD.


Correspondence: r.mitchell@unsw.edu.au

Acknowledgements: 

Rebecca Mitchell is supported by a PhD scholarship from Injury Prevention and Control Australia. Ann Williamson is supported by the NSW Injury Risk Management Research Centre, with core funding provided by the NSW Health Department, the NSW Roads and Traffic Authority and the Motor Accidents Authority.

Competing interests:

None identified.

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