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Data from: Drowning mortality by intent: a population-based cross-sectional study of 32 OECD countries, 2012–2014

Cite this dataset

Hsieh, Wanhua; Wang, Chien-Hsing; Lu, Tsung-Hsueh (2018). Data from: Drowning mortality by intent: a population-based cross-sectional study of 32 OECD countries, 2012–2014 [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.k5d0rp0

Abstract

Objective: To compare the drowning mortality rates and proportion of deaths of each intent among all drowning deaths in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries in 2012–2014. Design: A population-based cross-sectional study. Setting: 32 OECD countries. Participants: Individuals in OECD countries who died from drowning. Main outcome measures: Drowning mortality rates (deaths per 100,000 population) and proportion (%) of deaths of each intent (i.e., unintentional intent, intentional self-harm, assault, undetermined intent, and all intents combined) among all drowning deaths. Results: Countries with the highest drowning mortality rates (deaths per 100,000 population) were Estonia (3.53), Japan (3.49), and Greece (2.40) for unintentional intent; Ireland (0.96), Belgium (0.96), and Korea (0.89) for intentional self-harm; Austria (0.57), Korea (0.56), and Hungary (0.44) for undetermined intent; and Japan (4.35), Estonia (3.70), and Korea (2.73) for all intents combined. Korea ranked 12th and third for unintentional intent and all intents combined, respectively. By contrast, Belgium ranked second and 15th for intentional self-harm and all intents combined, respectively. The proportion of deaths of each intent among all drowning deaths in each country varied greatly: from 26.2% in Belgium to 96.8% in Chile for unintentional intent; 0.7% in Mexico to 57.4% in Belgium for intentional self-harm; 0.0% in nine countries to 4.9% in Mexico for assault; and 0.0% in Israel and Turkey to 38.3% in Austria for undetermined intent. Conclusions: A large variation in the practice of classifying undetermined intent in drowning deaths across countries was noted and this variation hinders valid international comparisons of intent-specific (unintentional and intentional self-harm) drowning mortality rates.

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